Etymology of Ancient Greek words
1) agōn, plural agōnes 'union; competition (antagonism);
From the Albanian language word *agon (dawn) and *agoni (agoní,-a feminine noun; 1. state of a person on the verge of death).
1) agōn, plural agōnes 'union; competition (antagonism);
From the Albanian language word *agon (dawn) and *agoni (agoní,-a feminine noun; 1. state of a person on the verge of death).
Dawn is the moment when night meets day, or *agoni the moment when life meets death. It is also the moment where their opposites meet, day and night, life and death, light and darkness. The Albanian language brought the concrete word *agon, the language of the churches borrowed the Albanian word and removed the concrete meaning of the word. The discovery of this in linguistics simply dispels the myth of the ancient Greek language. No word comes from Greek or French for the simple fact that those languages do not have the concrete roots of the first thought born in those words.
2) agorā, plural agorai "public assembly, place of public meeting"
It comes from the Albanian word *dora (hand). The hand symbolizes union because its construction is such that the 5 fingers are attached to a center around it. *a dora of Geg Albanian means it is a hand, (a=is and dora=hand). It is a hand where only a slight difference was made between D and G, from *dora to *gora, a known and accepted difference in phonetics. From the concrete concept of hand fingers came the unifying concept of G, group, cluster (from gluster), league, etc.
3) aidōs 'shame, feeling of shame; feeling of respect for others; honesty'
From the Albanian "i ndiej" (feel)
4) aitios 'responsible, guilty'; aitiā 'responsibility, guilt; cause
It comes from the Albanian form i atia (of him), e atija, which is found today in the answer to the question:
Whose fault is it? Atij (of him), atija (of him) (old form). It is also in the word *fajtor(guilty) from faitor> ba-"ait-o"-r, where b>v>f during time.
5) *akhos "sorrow, public expression of grief by lamentation or longing"
It comes from ankth (anxiety) and ankoj (I complain) that Orel gives the authorship of the word to the ancient Greek, but it is the opposite.
Ankth (Anxiety) is the second derivation of the word *angoj, heavy oppressive feeling; very big concern. It comes from *angoj of Geg Albanian, which has other phonetic transformations version such as renkoj (moan) and *lengoj
2) agorā, plural agorai "public assembly, place of public meeting"
It comes from the Albanian word *dora (hand). The hand symbolizes union because its construction is such that the 5 fingers are attached to a center around it. *a dora of Geg Albanian means it is a hand, (a=is and dora=hand). It is a hand where only a slight difference was made between D and G, from *dora to *gora, a known and accepted difference in phonetics. From the concrete concept of hand fingers came the unifying concept of G, group, cluster (from gluster), league, etc.
3) aidōs 'shame, feeling of shame; feeling of respect for others; honesty'
From the Albanian "i ndiej" (feel)
4) aitios 'responsible, guilty'; aitiā 'responsibility, guilt; cause
It comes from the Albanian form i atia (of him), e atija, which is found today in the answer to the question:
Whose fault is it? Atij (of him), atija (of him) (old form). It is also in the word *fajtor(guilty) from faitor> ba-"ait-o"-r, where b>v>f during time.
5) *akhos "sorrow, public expression of grief by lamentation or longing"
It comes from ankth (anxiety) and ankoj (I complain) that Orel gives the authorship of the word to the ancient Greek, but it is the opposite.
Ankth (Anxiety) is the second derivation of the word *angoj, heavy oppressive feeling; very big concern. It comes from *angoj of Geg Albanian, which has other phonetic transformations version such as renkoj (moan) and *lengoj
Orel says differently from the Proto-Albanian *anaka that it comes from the Old Greek ὰνἁκη (ànhakē), a word that is not found on any page of the books on the Old Greek language.
The etymology of the word is from the Geg Albanian "a n goje" (a(h) in mouth), the sound we make from our mouth when we suffer from an injury or illness.
The etymology of the word is from the Geg Albanian "a n goje" (a(h) in mouth), the sound we make from our mouth when we suffer from an injury or illness.
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