Today many word from Twitter, from the persons I follow:
Hittite word of the day nakappi-, negappi-, nikappi- (c.), a kind of bowl, ace. sg. DUG-na-kap-piin Hittite Etymological Dictionary
Turkish kap (m): pouch, sack, bag
kap-(v): to shut, to hit, to catch, to close These Turkish words would be interesting in this context!
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Hittite word of the day u̯ēlku- (n.) ‘grass, vegetation’ ( Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon )
Turkish ILGIN/YILGIN a kind of plant of Mediterranean Region, no culture plant. English: Tamarix. ILGIN: A town in Konya/Turkiye
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Hittite word of the day aiš / išš- "mouth" ( Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon )
Hittite word aiš / išš- "mouth" Turkish ağız: (mouth) Latin OS= mouth Sagay / Tuvan Turkish: aas Uzbek: oğiz (read it like English owis) Kyrgyz: ooz
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The name "Caria"is referred to as Karuwa (steep land) in Luwian, as Kares/Karkoi in ancient Hellenic texts, as Karkusa/Karkisa/Karakisa in Hittite texts, as Karka in the Persian records and as Keres/Geres in Egyptian hieroglyphic inscriptions
Ancient Turkish KIR cognates with this word. KIR (Read It like KR) means a steppe, open range; a higher hill, too
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PIE root of the day: PIE √ur- √uor- √uer- (vb.) ‘angreifen, fassen, nehmen, finden’ (IEW. 1160), see OIr. ro·fūar- (pret.) ‘invēnī’, Hitt. ḫantei·ura- (vb.) ‘herausfinden’:
Ancient
ur- (modern
vur): schlagen, fassen, to hit, schnell berühren Hurra,
Hurrah, a War cry, probably from hurren ‚sich schnell bewegen‘, like hurtig or
hurry. Both could have
Mongolian or
origin. Urra form ur- meaning to hit!
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PIE root of the day: PIE √ur- √uor- √uer- (a.) ‘hervorstehend, weit, groß’ (IEW 1151, 1167), see e.g. CLu. ura- (a.) ‘groß’, RV. vrādha- (pr.M.) ‘groß, stark, gewaltig sein’
ur, ura: Tumor Baskurtistan dialect oro=Tumor
root ür/ (uer) means to get more, to swell up, to fertilize, Uygur dislect: uri: the son, the young,
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PIE root of the day: PIE √ul- √uol- √uel- (sb.) ‘Geburt, Rang’ (IEW 842-843), see e.g. Hitt. ana·u̯ali- (a.) ‘gleichrangig, ebenbürtig’, Arm. ul- (sb.) ‘young of a goat/deer’: pielexicon.hum.helsinki.fi/?alpha=14.1
Turkish oğul-cuk: uterus, womb oğ- is a root dealing with birth, many words with that indicating birth/born. oğul: Children, the geborenen oğ: read it like ou oğul: read it like oul Turkish oğlak: young of a goat.
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PIE root of the day: PIE √uois- √ueis- √uis- (vb.) ‘gedeihen, grünen, sich (ver)mehren’ (sb.) ‘Baum, Sproß, Frucht’ (IEW 1133), see e.g. Lith. vaĩsiu- (m.) ‘Frucht, Ergebnis, Resultat’, Lat. uir·eo- (pr.2.) ‘grün sein, grünen’:
Turkish Yeşil : green From Old Turkish yaş: Feucht, young (tree, Sprossen), fresh, vegetable...
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PIE root of the day: PIE √uɑh- (vb.) ‘brennen’ (IEW –), see LAv. fra·vā- (pr.) ‘hervorscheinen, leuchten’, Hitt. u̯āḫ·nu- (pr.) ‘brennen’:
root ya- has exactly to do with light, fire. Words like yan-, yak-: brennen, Yarun: morning, tomorrow, (like in
‚Morgen ä’ for both meanigs) when it is bright again, Yalim: flame
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PIE root of the day: PIE √sɑh- √osɑh- √esɑh- (sb.) ‘Herr, Verwalter, Meister’, √sosɑh- √sesɑh- (vb.) ‘anordnen, herrschen, bestimmen’ (IEW 342 [diff.]), see e.g. OHitt. ešḫa- (c.) ‘EN: Herr: lord’, Lat. ero- (m.) ‘Herr’:
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