From: Tavi
Message: 69265
Date: 2012-04-07
Actually, I hired him as a concertino in my own orchestra. :-)> --- In cybalist@yahoogroups.com, Rick McCallister gabaroo6958@ wrote:
>
> Look at Bomhard, he takes the conzertmeister route. He trusts the
> authority of world famous linguists and lets them do a lot of the heavy
> lifting. He then picks up his baton and choreographs a Nostratic
> symphony by incorporating what he considers as complementary and
> coherent relationships. Now, he has to rely on the often glacial and
> very uneven pace of historical linguistics in various families and has
> to rewrite and rethink sections when theories are overturned, but it's a
> wise place to be if you're dealing with such vast fields of information.
>
As you can see, it was Krens (a former partner of Bomhard) who rooted "Nostratic" in the Dene-Caucasian phylum. But I'm afraid this "Proto-Nostratic" wasn't the mother tongue of a plethora of languages (like in a modern version of the diaspora of Noah's sons), but only the source of Neolithic loanwords such as Semitic 'goat', 'pig' and Kartvelian 'pig', which I derive from a root which originally designated ungulates (i.e. hoofed animals). Interestingly, this root gave 'horse' in NEC (which then passed to the paleo-IE dialect of the Steppes) and 'donkey' in Sumerian.> > Rick, did you have you read this?
> > http://vasco-caucasian.blogspot.com/2011/11/indo-european-horses.html
>
The IE words for 'male goat' (Latin caper) and 'boar' (Latin aper), not derived from traditional PIE due to irregular sound correspondences, stem from the autochthonous European Neolithic, from where they were exported to Semitic: Arabic Gafr-, Gufr- 'young of chamois or goat', ?\ifr-, ?\ufr- 'pig, boar, piglet'.