Day Brown wrote:
> Well, nobody hadda carry identification papers or fill out forms on
> ethnic identity. And both the archaeological record and our own DNA
> shows mixing was going on for 10,000 years or more, even with the
> Neanderthals before.
Hey I got these people as the Ochre's who wandered the coast Lines.
>
>
> At least in the matrix I see. Before the Romans, the Greeks knew the
> ancestors of the Scythians as the Western Celts & Eastern Carians, the
> former more farmers, the latter more nomadic & merchants, But both
> doing business with each other for thousands of years going back to the
> domestication of the horse 6000 years ago.
And Gaelic were even Older going back to the Original Horses and past to
the domestication of the "ASS".
It is twisted but Hunter and Hunted are running through the pages.
Not always the Hunter Hunting either.
>
>
> Adams shows a chart where To-charian, Celtic, & Sanskrit broke off from
> the Proto-Indo-European root, Germanic, Greek, & Latin breaking off
> from Celtic.
> Gaelic would seem to be the purest form of the original
> Celtic remaining.
No, Reds Gael, are a Southern People more related to the Catarrhs Basque,
and Moorish, than the Blond Gall's or Strangers who are the Germanic
Peoples.
The Reds are the Magh of the Hindu, the Dol/Dal, Cerbrie, it was my
fathers
family who allied with the Bears which is my mothers family.
> But none of them are really very pure. There was
> active trade as well as droughts or plagues which drove people from
> place to place time and again.
Gaelic's stayed fairly pure, believe me.
>
>
> The Greek word "toe" means "the", so we have "Tocharians" referring to
> the eastern most tribe of Celts, found in the deserts of what is now NW
> China. But despite their location, as Douglas Adams notes, Tocharian is
> a centum, not a satem, language, like all the Aryan languages west of
> the Birch/Beech line.
>
> So- I wondered what words of Celtic or Gaelic mite be similar.
> Father- Pater or Pa-ater as plural.
> Blessed- Sakar
> King- Wleantos (the "os" is a *feminine* suffix)
> God- Deos (thus the prime deity was female)
> eye- ak
> eyes- asam
> thus one who sees-
> pupil- akalsal
> teaching aklye
> passion enkal
> noble klyom
> deer aineya (They dont *have* deer in the desert, but they cast
> bronze deer broaches and buckles that sold widely from Damascus & the
> Black Sea to Xian China.)
> oxen opsi
>
> One of my favorites, "course of action", meaning kharma path is, in
> Tocharian, "kharmapath".
>
> The dying/consort winter solstice son of the Goddess was "Nysos", which
> the Greeks adopted as "Deo", as a bove, to become "Deonysos" aka
> Dionysis.
Dain Cecht, Dain Au Cecht, what do you call an ear of Corn?
MAZA, Apollo or Dagon
>
>
> Wiccasi ("si" the feminine suffix for someone with magic skill)
My Family.
Si, ****, Sidthe, Sithe, Badb ****, Banshee
>
>
> The cl***** of words are bewildering there are so many. Male, female, &
> neuter nouns. He, she, and like the Germanic, "zie", undefined ***.
Fairy's we are known for em.
>
> Male, female, and neuter forms of "They". More explicit verb tenses.
> Not only past, present, & future, but that past which is no more, that
> past which still is, that past which is and will be. As well as that
> past which mite have been, and mite be, is, or is not, now and in the
> future.
>
> "It depends on what the meaning of 'is' is." would not have worked in
> Tocharian. You always knew what a speaker referred to. All in all,
> there's a remarkable lack of ambiguity because of all the cl***** of
> words. Is Gaelic like this?
Usually, just gets twisted when outsiders translate and don't know the
Dialect.
It seems to be kind of like talking to a Brookliner.


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