Skip to main content

ETYMOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT GREEK WORD NIKI [Νίκη]

ETYMOLOGY OF THE ANCIENT GREEK WORD NIKI [Νίκη] 




The head-to-head match between two rams is a pattern of behavior everywhere, and for people, in most cases, it is associated with victory and defeat.
In the everyday life of primitive man, coming out on top was a common theme in relation to victory and defeat: for example, an individual who won a physical match in primitive times involving punches and kicks could be said to have beaten someone else, of two people involved in a physical match, one of them always won. 

And one of them the animal or the man ends up being killed, or lying on the battlefield unable to stand, or running if he still can and the winner doesn't follow. The subject can be a ram against another ram of the same species, a wolf against a deer, an eagle against a rabbit or a human being against another human being, the quality of the winners does not matter, what was important for the proto-Albanians was the amount of winners for the semantic construction of the new word. An animal against another animal, a person against another person, a group of people against another group of people, always one individual or one party wins. There is always only one winner, NI-KI, or NI-KE.
Here, we empirically investigated whether mental representations of winning and losing are related to the number of people involved in a physical match and their numbers after the physical match is over.
Most of us learn that coming out first is an important factor in achieving victory. During these individual physical matches in primitive humans, these repeated experiences may help to reinforce the connection between the number of participants and the final results of the match, the duel where only one person emerges victorious.
This phenomenon may also have a phylogenetic basis. In particular, the relationship between the number of participants and winning may be more common among reptiles and mammals, where physical combat has traditionally been the only way to determine victory. In all nature the rule is the same, only one of them wins.
When exposed to danger, animals tend to fight to prevent predation, but from the fight between them, only one will emerge victorious. After achieving victory, humans and other mammals tend to extend their arms and legs as part of their celebration or expression of excitement.

Taken together, it is not unusual to see that the winner of a fight between two human beings is one of them, suggesting that the number of the winner may be a determinant in determining the linguistic unit for this occurrence.

While the word victory is Νίκη and νίκῃ in ancient Greek. Linguists say that the Etymology and Origin is unknown. So Niki was left without etymology, without at/father and am/mother, or as they say today, etym. Linguists finally add that it probably originates from Proto-Indo-European and is similar to νεῖκος (neîkos), Lithuanian ap-nìkti ("to attack"). Attacking does not mean winning. You can even get lost.
Etymology 
NIKI= 
NI KI= 
NJI KI=Geg Albanian

MEANING 
Meaning: There is one.
There is only one winner.





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Nephilim

N 'eh - Ph 'ih- L 'ee- M /  Nepheeleem Zacharia Sitchin (July 11, 1920 – October 9, 2010)  wrote the " Nephilim " (נְפִילִים) is derived from “nafàl" and means “fall". The term Nephilim occurs in Genesis 6:1-4, describing the point of time when three things began: men began to increase in number, came into existence the daughters of men , and the sons of God went to the daughters of men and had children by them. Is the "nephillim" really only a Hebrew word? That question is very subtle, however I think it has been more a limit of thinking for linguists rather than a serious argument. Let's begin first with the probable meaning the linguists think it is. We know that the " fall"  in every language means moving downward from a higher position involuntarily, usually by an accident, which maybe was the reason why Michael S. Heiser, PhD candidate, Department of Hebrew and Semitic Studies , University of Wisconsin...

Word creation. The "D" letter origin and the "D" pictogram rule of the word creation.

  In this article I will cover  the origin of the letter  D letter, and the pictogram concept of the word creation.  It was my first discovery of the word creation. In this blog I will give my discoveries, the rules of word creation of the European languages. Multiple theories exist as to how language first originated. Nobody is sure which one is true. Certified Translations Get Pricing Order Translation What is the Oldest Language in the World? There are over 7,000 languages in the world. Could there have been a time on the earth that we all spoke one language? If so, what is the oldest language in the world?  So what was the first language?  Discovering the first language that people spoke is difficult because so many languages died and were considered lost in history. However, ancient languages still survive until today; these languages may have been transformed a lot but their old origins may be traceable. Written languages existed but this does n...

Total positional tolerance at material condition

Total positional tolerance at material condition (Hole) Suppose the Ø 1.005 / 1.010 hole is inspected and there are six parts with different ID dimensions. Their actual sizes checked with run out methods give that their actual axis is to be .006” over and up from the true position even though they have different actual ID’s. We want to know which part is within true position tolerance at MMC. Parts to be acceptable require some calculation when is used the run out method.             In GD&T, maximum material condition (MMC) refers to a hole that contains the greatest amount of material.             To understand and memorize simply and logically the concept, I suppose that you have a part designed as a square with one hole in the center, Ø 1.005 / 1.010 . You have produced just 5 parts and measured their holes. The hole of part #1 is on the low side of its tolerance Ø 1.005" and the hole of part #5 is on high sid...