bob x
Well-Known Member
Sanskrit ghr.ta is the same root as English grease; Sanskrit s'urya is the same root as Avestan hware (NEVER "khware") and English south. These two roots have nothing whatsoever in common.The Sanskrit grta, s'urya, and the Avestan hware- or khware, and English grease were probably all developed from the same root.
The crimson root has nothing more in common with the south root than either does with the grease root.And Keresa is not totally unrelated to hware
Farsi khor means "eater".It's also akin to Iranian forms like Khor "sun"
1. ghat is more commonly used for the paths UP to the mountains than for river-access. The meaning is STEPS.I think that "down [to the river]" is the key here. Light "shines" down.
2. Light is generally thought of as shining OUTWARD in all directions. Our words radiate and ray are from the Latin radius "spoke of a wheel; abstractly, a line drawn out from the center of a circle to any direction". In Sanskrit vikhshaen.a "to shine forth", the vi- "forth" prefix is cognate to English away.
3. Neither the grade root nor the shine root have any relationship to any other words for "down".
Sigh... I don't even know what you mean anymore by a term like "akin". To me, it means an ancestral relationship: that is, if you go back to more and more ancient forms, they start to look MORE (rather than LESS) alike. One might guess that Tir and Sirius looked alike, if Iranian "t" corresponds to Greek "s" (I know of not one single example of such a correspondence), but when you show that the earlier is Tishtriya which doesn't look like "Sirius" at all anymore...Tir is a later form of Tishtriya and both are akin to Sirius.
You were claiming some connection to ghr.ta which is SPECIFICALLY to sprinkle OIL and nothing else. Your link on Zoroastrian festivals contains nothing at all to explain your bizarre claim that the Dog Star either "rains" or "sprinkles" anything, in anybody's belief-system: mid-summer is not, to say the very least, associated with extra "rain" in Iran.I said "rained" or "sprinkled" down not "sprinkled oil" (see Zoroastrian Festivals )
??? Absolutely not. Two phonemes which used to be different could start sounding the same, but if there is only one phoneme, it is not going to split into two, not the same way in dozens of different descendant languages scattered over two continents. English grease and south start with sounds that are nothing alike, because they were NEVER anything alike; if they'd been alike to begin with, they would still be alike. Greek khristos and sirius start with sounds that are nothing alike, because they were never alike. Sanskrit ghr.ta and s'urya start with sounds that are nothing alike, because they were never alike. Iranian khor and hware start with sounds that are nothing alike, because they were never alike.Indo-Iranian is a reconstruction. It's possible that the "s > h" and the "g" descended from the same phoneme.
Every source in our earlier discussions, including the ones you posted yourself, agreed that Vedic Sanskrit is older than Gathic Avestan.The only language I know that is said to be older than Avestan is Hittite.
"DEFINITELY"??? You have not proposed any account of how it could POSSIBLY be the same root.May not be a "preservation," Keresa, but definitely descended from the same root.
While the Germanics, who had split of thousands of years earlier, and were living thousands of miles away, and would not have any renewed cultural contact with either Greece or Iran for centuries yet, were JUST BY COINCIDENCE(???) using the same word to mean "oil" and nothing but "oil", just like the authors of the Vedas, off the other direction in India, were JUST BY COINCIDENCE using the same word to mean "oil", and nothing but "oil".Maybe the semantics changed from Avestan to Greek from "Sun-shine" or "Kingly Glory" to "what keeps the fire burning," and then to "oil."
You have some totally bizarre notion of how things work. You think words shift pronunciation in totally arbitrary ways, keeping scarcely one letter in place, while shifting meanings from one vague and tenuous connection to another. No, the grease root has been as steady in meaning and pronunciation as the two root or the mother root or other famously stable words.