From: Tavi
Message: 69376
Date: 2012-04-19
>I strongly disagree with your interpretation, specially because the numerals '5' and '6' are foreign loanwords, respectively Vasco-Caucasian and Semitic.
> I agree with the connection between *-thur- of the Pre-Greek words and
> the zero-grade of PIE *(kWe)-twer-, also between *thri- of <thriambos>
> and the zero-grade of PIE *trei-.
>
> > I'd tentatively link this *kWe- to Vasco-Caucasian *q'Hw�
> > <http://newstar.rinet.ru/cgi-bin/response.cgi?single=1&basename=/data/ca\
> > uc/caucet&text_number=2315&root=config> '2'. IMHO PIE '2' would be a
> > borrowing of the prefixed NWC form.
>
> I have difficulty correlating 'and, moreover, indeed', etc. with the numeral 'two'. PIE *kWe-twer- and *pen-kWe probably acquired *kWe from counting rituals, and the discrepancy between *seks and *sweks might be due to dissimilation, *sweks-kWe > *seks-kWe.
>
> > > As you may recall, in 2008 I argued that this is a "mid-range"Interesting. I'd like to read more about it.
> > connection and Pre-Greek belongs to a "Para-IE" group.
> > >
> > Yes, your "West Pontic", whose stop system is largely similar to
> > Georgiev's Thraco-Pelasgian.
>
> Poor naming, since others have used "Pontic" differently. A better choice would be "Balkano-Danubian". The stop system in my model had five points of articulation, preceding the centum-satem business.
>
> Georgiev's Th-P was satem, with a much shallower time-depth.Not really, because Georgiev's chronology is actually deeper than the std one. See for example the lower map on p. 357 of the 3rd edition of his book. He also states (p. 361): "the Pelasgians probably developed the pre-Sesklo (and Sesklo), Larissa I and Servia cultures, while the Thracians developed the Karanovo I-III (6th-4th millenium BC)."
>
> Most languages which have been studied in depth have stratification, but "hybridization" is a poor term for this process.The latter term is mainly used by proponents of the "Paleolithic Continuity Theory". Anyway, mainstream IE-ists are oblivious to stratification.
>
> > Pre-Greek would reflect one or more languages directly descending fromBut this doesn't mean somebody could eventually succeed, as there's already a number of reasonable Etruscan-Pre-Greek correspondences.
> > the ones spoken in Neolithic Europe which survived to kurganization. One
> > of these survivors was Etruscan itself.
>
> Regardless, attempts to find a close relationship between Pre-Greek and Etruscan have failed.
>
> > But as suggested by Villar's and my own researches, both "Kurgan" andNo, but I don't think Uralic is a close relative of IE.
> > "pre-Kurgan" IE branches would be part of a larger Eurasiatic phylum
> > which included Altaic (and possibly other families such as
> > Eskimo-Aleutian), and whose common ancestor was spoken in the Upper
> > Palaeolithic.
>
> Do you have an opinion on Seefluth's Uralo-Eskimo?
>
> > BTW, I think the practice of reconstructing PIE "laryngeals" from everyI don't think they're arbitrary at all. At least in the case of *e-, I think it's a genuine prothetic vowel.
> > Greek prothetic vowel is rather absurd.
>
> It makes more sense than assuming arbitrary prothesis.
>