Let's look at the way the Albanian language built words in ancient times.
The Italian term 'palazzo', extremely well-known in European languages, is a concept to indicate an important construction, and which has become famous all over the world, they say that it is the evolution of a very specific toponym. During the 1st century AD the Roman emperors, from Augustus to Domitian, erected their residences and buildings of power on the Palatine Hill - in Latin, Palatium. This colossal complex, the cerebral cortex of the Empire, was called the Domus Augustana, but it soon became common to refer to it only by the name 'palatium': in short, 'palace' arose from the palace of imperial Rome, thought to be a metonym of the hill in which it stood.
So *palazzo, comes from Latin palātium ("palace, large residence") which comes from Palātium ("Palatine"), one of the seven hills of Rome, where aristocrats built large houses.
But where does the Palatine itself come from?
This is where modern etymology gets stuck. Beyond this boundary is an earlier culture that gave rise to linguistic embryos. Which language is revealed when it crosses this linguistic ideological wall, already concrete
The origin of the word Palatium
PALATIUM=
PA LATI UM=
BA LATI= where P>B
BA LA- TI=
BA LA is the root of the word
Where
*Ba is the verb "ba of Geg" that means to make and *la is another Albanian word that means up.
In today's Albanian, an object made (built) high, a high hill, or if it is a city, a city built high on a hill like Berati.
Etymology of BERAT
BERAT=
BE RAT=
BE LAT= Where R>L
BE LA-T= Where T is ending
Berat and palat(ne) have the same etymology, or origin, they come from the proto-Albanian language
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