Warren Cowgill proposed a derivation *h1esr-no- from *h1esr '(flowing) blood', a semantic shift with parallels elsewhere.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sat Mar 19, 2022 9:04 amThe Germanic word for 'iron' is a loanword from Celtic. But what is the etymology of Celtic *îsarnon?
Paleo-European languages
- Talskubilos
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Re: Paleo-European languages
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Re: Paleo-European languages
I've read De Vaan's book on Leiden-Brill and once again he disaapointed (I think I already mentioned his is a rather mediocre work). To begin with, he links sīdus with the verbs consīderō 'to examine, to contemplate', desīderō 'to desire', which is a different etymology!WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sat Mar 19, 2022 9:04 amWhat concerns the semantic connection between 'iron' and 'star', keep in mind that the first iron known to humans was from meteorites. The ancient Egyptians and Sumerians called the metal 'sky-metal'. Then there is this old chestnut Greek sidêros 'iron' vs. Latin sîdus (gen. sîderis) 'star, constellation'. As similar as these words look, they do not actually match; but AFAIK neither has a good IE etymology, and they may be borrowings from related sources.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Yes, that makes more sense than my suggestion (not originally by me; I have read it somewhere, but don't remember where, may merely have been a post in some Internet discussion group of little value) involving Basque izar. Cowgill was an accomplished and respected Indo-Europeanist, which doesn't automatically imply that he was always right (even the greatest minds make mistakes), but I see no reason why this etymology should be wrong. At least, he knew vastly more about such matters than I do!Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Mar 20, 2022 4:50 amWarren Cowgill proposed a derivation *h1esr-no- from *h1esr '(flowing) blood', a semantic shift with parallels elsewhere.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sat Mar 19, 2022 9:04 amThe Germanic word for 'iron' is a loanword from Celtic. But what is the etymology of Celtic *îsarnon?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
It's not he who links them, he's quoting other scholars who do; it's only right for an etymological dictionary to discuss the previously proposed etymologies. Rather than being dismissive, it would be better if you said why you think that the words are not related and what you think the correct etymology is and on what basis.Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Mar 20, 2022 8:25 am I've read De Vaan's book on Leiden-Brill and once again he disaapointed (I think I already mentioned his is a rather mediocre work). To begin with, he links sīdus with the verbs consīderō 'to examine, to contemplate', desīderō 'to desire', which is a different etymology!
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Fair. On one hand, the etymology proposed by Rix would explain Latin consīderō, desīderō as being cognate to Greek ithús ~ euthús 'straight, just' and Gujarati sīdhũ 'straight(forward), upright', Sanskrit siddha 'acomplished', etc. from an IE root *seHdh- 'to acomplish a goal'. But IMHO there's no way Latin sīdus would semantically fit here, so I consider it to be a homonymous word with no obvious IE etymology (*sweid- 'to shine' would explain sūdus 'dry; sunny'), atlhough probably related to Greek sidēros.hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 2:12 pmIt's not he who links them, he's quoting other scholars who do; it's only right for an etymological dictionary to discuss the previously proposed etymologies. Rather than being dismissive, it would be better if you said why you think that the words are not related and what you think the correct etymology is and on what basis.Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Mar 20, 2022 8:25 am I've read De Vaan's book on Leiden-Brill and once again he disaapointed (I think I already mentioned his is a rather mediocre work). To begin with, he links sīdus with the verbs consīderō 'to examine, to contemplate', desīderō 'to desire', which is a different etymology!
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Not really. Take for example Etruscan zamathi 'gold' and Greek ksanthós 'yellow' ~ ksouthós 'golden yellow', or Etruscan spur, śpur 'city' and Greek labúr-inthos. However, the connection between Etruscan and Pre-Greek wouldn't be too close.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Wed Mar 09, 2022 10:22 amAnd finally, I don't think that Etruscan, whether it originated in Anatolia or Italy, was a member of this family. There are AFAIK no meaningful resemblances between Etruscan and the pre-Greek loanwords in Greek.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Perhaps he recognized the similar shapes. Do you think that's what happened? Like, he saw that the words were superficially similar, and he thought "Well hot damn, those words must be related!" Do you think maybe he made that fallacy, being just a little too credulous in assuming similar words come from the same source? What sort of punishment do you think is appropriate for doing that? Can you see it? Can you see what he's doing wrong here? How can we learn from that and grow? What should we, as observers of this mistake, take away from it? What are your thoughts on this, Talskubilos? Look at it. Go back and look at it again. What does it make you think about?Talskubilos wrote: ↑Sun Mar 20, 2022 8:25 am ...he links sīdus with the verbs consīderō 'to examine, to contemplate', desīderō 'to desire', which is a different etymology!
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Oh dear, here we go again…
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Re: Paleo-European languages
It can be related to sidēros only if of you assume it's a wanderwort loaned into both languages. It can't be an IE cognate, because initial /s/ in Latin cannot corespond to intital /s/ in Greek (PIE /*#s-/ > /#s/ in Latin, but /#h-/ in Greek).Talskubilos wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 4:11 pm Fair. On one hand, the etymology proposed by Rix would explain Latin consīderō, desīderō as being cognate to Greek ithús ~ euthús 'straight, just' and Gujarati sīdhũ 'straight(forward), upright', Sanskrit siddha 'acomplished', etc. from an IE root *seHdh- 'to acomplish a goal'. But IMHO there's no way Latin sīdus would semantically fit here, so I consider it to be a homonymous word with no obvious IE etymology (*sweid- 'to shine' would explain sūdus 'dry; sunny'), atlhough probably related to Greek sidēros.
Also did you note that de Vaan actually makes some of the same points you make about the semantic mismatch between ithús ~ euthús and sidus? I mean, de Vaan is certainly not the only acceptable fount of wisdom, but his disctionary is a solid work reflecting current scholarship. So I wouldn't be that dismissive about it.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Moose-tache, who is currently on your ignore list, made this post.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 8:28 pmWhat are your thoughts on this, Talskubilos? Look at it. Go back and look at it again. What does it make you think about?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
That's obviously right.hwhatting wrote: ↑Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:37 amIt can be related to sidēros only if of you assume it's a wanderwort loaned into both languages. It can't be an IE cognate, because initial /s/ in Latin cannot corespond to intital /s/ in Greek (PIE /*#s-/ > /#s/ in Latin, but /#h-/ in Greek).Talskubilos wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 4:11 pm Fair. On one hand, the etymology proposed by Rix would explain Latin consīderō, desīderō as being cognate to Greek ithús ~ euthús 'straight, just' and Gujarati sīdhũ 'straight(forward), upright', Sanskrit siddha 'acomplished', etc. from an IE root *seHdh- 'to acomplish a goal'. But IMHO there's no way Latin sīdus would semantically fit here, so I consider it to be a homonymous word with no obvious IE etymology (*sweid- 'to shine' would explain sūdus 'dry; sunny'), atlhough probably related to Greek sidēros.
Taken on the whole, De Vaan's dictionary is a rather mediocre work, unworthy of its selling price (84,56€ in Amazon store). By contrast, Matasović's Proto-Celtic is much better. Perhaps this has something to do with the fact he doesn't belong to Leiden IE school.hwhatting wrote: ↑Tue Mar 22, 2022 3:37 amAlso did you note that de Vaan actually makes some of the same points you make about the semantic mismatch between ithús ~ euthús and sidus? I mean, de Vaan is certainly not the only acceptable fount of wisdom, but his disctionary is a solid work reflecting current scholarship. So I wouldn't be that dismissive about it.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Every time I am reminded of this fact it makes me smile. It's like knowing you're banned from the state of Florida.Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Mar 22, 2022 4:39 amMoose-tache, who is currently on your ignore list, made this post.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 8:28 pmWhat are your thoughts on this, Talskubilos? Look at it. Go back and look at it again. What does it make you think about?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
On whose ignore list? It can't be your own, because you replied to it.Talskubilos wrote: ↑Tue Mar 22, 2022 4:39 amMoose-tache, who is currently on your ignore list, made this post.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 8:28 pmWhat are your thoughts on this, Talskubilos? Look at it. Go back and look at it again. What does it make you think about?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Are you sure your ignore list is working?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
How much do we know about the typologies of pre-IE languages of Europe?
I understand there are some theories on the phonology of a pre-Greek substrate, and a fair bit is known of phonology and morphology of the attested languages of the Mediterranean area, but how much is known about the totally unattested languages of Northern Europe?
I'm mostly wondering if we know anything about how the languages would fit into modern linguistic areas. Specifically, do we know if the paleo-European languages were typologically similar to other Eurasian languages? Or is it all completely lost to time?
I understand there are some theories on the phonology of a pre-Greek substrate, and a fair bit is known of phonology and morphology of the attested languages of the Mediterranean area, but how much is known about the totally unattested languages of Northern Europe?
I'm mostly wondering if we know anything about how the languages would fit into modern linguistic areas. Specifically, do we know if the paleo-European languages were typologically similar to other Eurasian languages? Or is it all completely lost to time?
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Re: Paleo-European languages
Very little is known for sure. The "Standard Average European" phenomenon does not appear to be old enough to be ascribed to a Paleo-European substratum, and all we have are a handful of words without satisfactory etymologies which some scholars ascribe to such languages, but these words don't tell us much about the typology of the source languages.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
You could probably get a hint of phonology typology of North Europe if you get your hands on a list of words with unclear etymology from languages of that area. (and doing some internal reconstruction at first, of course)
There was specifically some paper that looked at words for sturgeon and beans in some european languages (not necessarily northern), but I can't recall its title on top of my head.
There was specifically some paper that looked at words for sturgeon and beans in some european languages (not necessarily northern), but I can't recall its title on top of my head.
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Re: Paleo-European languages
I was thinking more along the lines of, say, head-marking vs. dependent marking, ergativity, morphological typology, and so forth, the kinds of things Nichols covered in Linguistic Diversity in Space and Time. But that's almost certainly completely lost without a trace.