Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:06 am
hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 2:29 pmIs actually a word meaning “
apple” or “fruit” derived from the Nakh-Dagahestani lexeme attested in Eastern Caucasian?
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sat Sep 04, 2021 11:53 pmNot necessarily so, but it would provide the "missing link" for IE
*mah2l-o-
A potential semantic development is not much of a missing link
I was referring to phonology, not semantics, because the IE word isn't directly linked to the '
apple' Wanderwort.
So what is the exact role of that "missing link"? Do you assume PIE loaned the N-D word for "warm" and then derived
meh2lo- "
apple" from it? Or do you think EC and IE are related?
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:06 am
Problematic" means "it doesn't fit in the mainstream theory".
Well, yes. The more rigorous a theory, the more things it needs to leave unexplained. But in my view, that's better than handwaving and have ad-hoc explanations. The ad-hoc-ness is what I don't like about Kloekhorst's assumptions of an s-mobile.
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:06 am
hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 2:29 pm(
š is not a regular continuation of laryngeals; Kloekhorst assume an s-mobile here, which is also ad hoc and doesn't seem to be attested in other branches).
As a matter of fact, he rejects any relationship between
šam(a)lu- and
*ab(ō)l-, which it's too bad.
He does, yes. Just to be clear, the s-mobile is what he assumes for "eye" and "nail".
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:06 am
hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 2:29 pmAs I don't know much about Proto-Uralic, how does the Uralic form show evidence for a laryngeal?
Just as in Greek, initial
*o- in Uralic (and incidentally also
u- in Basque) would point to something like
*h3
Is that your own ad-hoc theory, or do is there a list of correspondences for this somewhere?
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 4:06 am
hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 2:29 pm
That looks basically like "everything can come from everything". It would be better if you applied the rigour and skepticism you apply to other people's theories also to your own theories.
Of course I do.
Well, you don't do it here.
WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Sep 06, 2021 3:02 pm
Apparently, there is some variation. The most common reflex of PIE laryngeals in loanwords into Uralic is AFAIK zero, but there appear to be a few words where a laryngeal appears to be reflected by
*k,
*x or
*š. See
this chart for "Indo-Uralic" sound correspondences - which IMHO quite clearly shows that the bulk of the items are loanwords from IE into Uralic rather than inherited from Proto-Indo-Uralic or whatever.
Thanks!
Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Sep 07, 2021 5:31 am
Of course I disagree. Having both 'ditch' (or similar) and 'piglet' derived from the same lexeme is quiet suspicious to be true. On the other hand, the connection between the IE and Sinitic words for 'dog' seems too evident to be a chance resemblance.
You mean "pig"? Anyway, there is something called homonymy -
*perk'- "spotted, multicoloured" and
*perk'- "depression, trough" may not be the same lexeme, but two that have become homonyms - actually, you yourself have theorised that the latter may be a loan, which would make it a similar case to Gernan
Strauß "bouquet" (native word) vs.
Strauß "ostrich" (loan). And who says that the Sinitic "pig" words Nort mentioned, if they have something to do with this, aren't a direct or indirect loan from IE?