>Check out
>http://tinyurl.com/2ut83kq
As soon as I see such second names as Vajda dealing with
"Sabirs" and the like, I'd rather stop any further reading and
continue if the author(s) are Germans, French, English etc.
As far as Euro-Asian populations are of concern, I'd read
only very few such authors (who in their own vernacular
are called "szerkeztõk").
>I think you lost me here.
Read a bit about the "universe" of the European "race" living for
millennia East of the Dnepr and of the Don. You ain't seen nothin'
yet. Much of the "cybalist" subjects occurred there.
>Check 'WATER' in
>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yeniseian
"Stone" and "river" are very close to Turkish tash and su. Also
"winter" (k(w)et(h)i versus kîsh). Also Turkish iki versus Yenisei
variants stated in the list. Also "water" compared with Turkic
kül & göl "lake". Also perhaps "birch tree" u:s&, utcha, kus
compared with Turkisch hush [huS]
So, Yeniseian might look like Prototurkish (and I compared
those words listed with *modern* Turkish vocabulary of
Turkey!). So what?
>Interesting videos.
Das glaub' ich. :)
>As for the connection between the Odin thing and Iranian-speaking >nomadic peoples (Sarmatians/Alans) the other George and myself >had many and long arguments, as can seen in the archives.
I know. But you both haven't yet concentrated on plausible links
(except for some cases where some Sarmatians might have been
assimilated, along with their "tamgas" in the mass of Germanic
tribes.)
>The Odin thing is appr. 60 BCE.
Is this a sure thing? Namely that Odin (a *deity*) appeared no
sooner than 60 bce.
>BTW you should switch to UTF-8, if you want to use funny characters.
The funny thing is that my browser is setted UTF-8 *by default*, and
in spite of that it renders ... funny characters as soon as I post
messages via yohoogroups.com. (Some of them are repaired, but
only some of them, whenever I switch to ISO-8859-2. Jumpin' tootin'
blazes! :-))
George