The etymology of the English word chair does not come from Old Greek καθέδρα (kathédra, "a teacher's chair, throne"), from κατά (katá, "down") + ἕδρα (hédra, "seat")
The above is a more sophisticated etymological trick.
καθέδρα comes from:
καθέδρα/kathédra
1) κα-alb. ku/where
2) thê-alb. the (speak)
3) δ- alb. t'/dhe / to, and
4) ρα-alb. rah, rri/stay, sit down
Meaning:
Where do I sit to (and) speak (talk)
When it is known that the Danube culture invented the chair 8000 years ago, and when the concepts *ku(*kv is the syllable of the Danubian script) and *rri/stay were invented thousands of years ago, it is not possible that this *chair came from the chair of the teachers of a very new language, which today they call ancient Greek, but no one knows its old name, which did not create new words but only wrote a spoken language at that moment in time. The language concepts *ku and *rri were created from a previous spoken language, the old Albanian language, accepted their assumption that it was not written in Europe before, while the Albanian language says the opposite because it has open alphabetic codes in its words which technically contradicts the time when it was accepted as a written language.
The words/concepts *ku and *rri are very old when the peoples who spoke that language didn't have professors with chairs, but with archeological evidence they had written 8000 years ago, for 2000 years in a row, the script that today we call the Danube script
Cheir/chair come from *ku and *rri.
The languages that use the Albanian words *ku/where and *ul/sit dow to form their words for culo/ass and kolo cannot have the origin of the word chair.
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