νεκρόπολις (nekrópolis)
Wherever you turn the etymology of the word NECROPOL, it comes out exclusively from the proto-Albanian language
Meaning:
necropolis (n.)
The bandwagon etymology:
From Greek Nekropolis, a burial place near Alexandria, from nekros "corpse" (from PIE root *nek- (1) "death") + polis "city" (see polis).
The PIE linguists instead of finding *dek, they mistakenly found *nek, where they artificially turned N into D, because phonetically it is impossible, or they did it for ideological reasons, because the necropolis starts with *Nek.
Let's admit for a moment that they are right, but the question arises, what is the etymology of *ro, because *ro is not a suffix in that word formation. There is no *ros sufix in ancient Greek, but only *os. Also, there is no NEKR-type fusion without having a final vowel, there is no basic monosyllable *nekr.
Wherever you turn the etymology of the word NECROPOL, it comes out exclusively from the proto-Albanian language
Meaning:
necropolis (n.)
The bandwagon etymology:
From Greek Nekropolis, a burial place near Alexandria, from nekros "corpse" (from PIE root *nek- (1) "death") + polis "city" (see polis).
The PIE linguists instead of finding *dek, they mistakenly found *nek, where they artificially turned N into D, because phonetically it is impossible, or they did it for ideological reasons, because the necropolis starts with *Nek.
Let's admit for a moment that they are right, but the question arises, what is the etymology of *ro, because *ro is not a suffix in that word formation. There is no *ros sufix in ancient Greek, but only *os. Also, there is no NEKR-type fusion without having a final vowel, there is no basic monosyllable *nekr.
The 'ro' part of Akro-polis is not e suffix, *ro in Akro is not a suffix.
There are two ways to build a word from a pre-existing language. The first way is the formation of combinations of root words of the first language, which I call a positive way, in a straight way, or the formation of new words from words built from their negatives, oblique ones that turns meaning of the the root into the opposite meaning. An example of the right way, I am creating two new words as VDIES-POLIS, from the the Albanian language word vdes(die) or DEKPOLIS from Albanian Grg *dek (die) which would create a new word as the city of the dead, or in the negative way as NUK-RO-POLIPS AS NOT-ALIVE-POLIS from *nuk (not) and *rro (live, alive).
The etymology is simple, NEKROS is corpse because it is a person who "does not live" built as a conjunction of the protoalbanian words *nuk (not) and *rrosh (live, alive) in a new conjuction as NUKROS. This takes a new shape and semantics because *NEK(not) is a negation of RRO (life, alive) which is understood by corpses and dead, and so the priests threw and eliminated the challenger of their god in the creation of the first language, they stole the words from protoalbanian language and built a new word made in as ancient Greek, actually not very old formally in this long polysyllabic form, and at the same time stealing credit from the first builders of the protoalbanian language, from its small forms of the first monosyllabic linguistic embryos.
NUK RRO(not alive) is the root of NECROS and NECROPOLIS.
Necropolis comes from the *nuk(not) denier of *rro (life).
Albania dictionary
*rroj (live)
live intransitive verb; -ta, -tur 1. live:
*nuk
The meaning of the word *nuk
completely negates the meaning of a verb.
There are two ways to build a word from a pre-existing language. The first way is the formation of combinations of root words of the first language, which I call a positive way, in a straight way, or the formation of new words from words built from their negatives, oblique ones that turns meaning of the the root into the opposite meaning. An example of the right way, I am creating two new words as VDIES-POLIS, from the the Albanian language word vdes(die) or DEKPOLIS from Albanian Grg *dek (die) which would create a new word as the city of the dead, or in the negative way as NUK-RO-POLIPS AS NOT-ALIVE-POLIS from *nuk (not) and *rro (live, alive).
The etymology is simple, NEKROS is corpse because it is a person who "does not live" built as a conjunction of the protoalbanian words *nuk (not) and *rrosh (live, alive) in a new conjuction as NUKROS. This takes a new shape and semantics because *NEK(not) is a negation of RRO (life, alive) which is understood by corpses and dead, and so the priests threw and eliminated the challenger of their god in the creation of the first language, they stole the words from protoalbanian language and built a new word made in as ancient Greek, actually not very old formally in this long polysyllabic form, and at the same time stealing credit from the first builders of the protoalbanian language, from its small forms of the first monosyllabic linguistic embryos.
NUK RRO(not alive) is the root of NECROS and NECROPOLIS.
Necropolis comes from the *nuk(not) denier of *rro (life).
Albania dictionary
*rroj (live)
live intransitive verb; -ta, -tur 1. live:
*nuk
The meaning of the word *nuk
completely negates the meaning of a verb.
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