Re: Res: Res: [tied] Origin of *marko- (was: Hachmann versus Kossack

From: fournet.arnaud
Message: 57323
Date: 2008-04-15

----- Original Message -----
From: "tgpedersen" <tgpedersen@...>
To: <cybalist@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 15, 2008 9:30 AM
Subject: [Courrier indésirable] Re: Res: Res: [tied] Origin of *marko- (was:
Hachmann versus Kossack?)


--- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com, Piotr Gasiorowski <gpiotr@...> wrote:
>
> On 2008-04-14 20:57, Joao S. Lopes wrote:
>
> > If there's no such cognate in Eastern Europe (at least NE Eurpe),
> > Celts-German picked this word from where?
>
> And why should this Celto-Germanic *marko- have to be connected with
> <mori> etc.? A vague similarity involving short words with commonly
> occurring consonants is hardly compelling.

Hunnic loan?
Torsten
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Cher Torsten,
Tu n'as pas bien compris !

Horses and Germanic are native to the northern suburbs of Lullea,
When Jastorf expanded south, as Knysh told you,
this word, independantly coined by Germanic speakers in Lullea,
who needed a word to talk about their horses,
as Piotr told us, got transmitted to Celtic people in the south.
Indo-iranians explained to the Goths how to harness a horse to a chariot
instead of using them to draw sledges.
Clear.
That's the traditional point of view.
Ask Knysh for more details and archeological data.

Arnaud

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