Why is Agron Dalipaj right with his etymologies?
It does not take much preparation and language education, it is enough to know and respect the Albanian language to extract the essence of the origin of the word.
Furious with anger, Achilles takes his revenge beyond the Dardanian and Trojan code of honor by dragging Hector's corpse from his chariot around the walls of Troy. The king, his wife, and the Trojans, unable to escape this shameful act, watched this breach of the honor code of treating the dead, this barbarism from the top of the walls of Troy.
Consider only the part of the sentence written above by me "TERHEK.....dragging it.."
Look carefully at the form of the verb TERHEK.
It didn't take long for us to realize that HEKTOR is a TERHEK, the Gegnishte form of the word which means *pull in English
TERHEK
HEKTER=
It does not take much preparation and language education, it is enough to know and respect the Albanian language to extract the essence of the origin of the word.
Furious with anger, Achilles takes his revenge beyond the Dardanian and Trojan code of honor by dragging Hector's corpse from his chariot around the walls of Troy. The king, his wife, and the Trojans, unable to escape this shameful act, watched this breach of the honor code of treating the dead, this barbarism from the top of the walls of Troy.
Consider only the part of the sentence written above by me "TERHEK.....dragging it.."
Look carefully at the form of the verb TERHEK.
It didn't take long for us to realize that HEKTOR is a TERHEK, the Gegnishte form of the word which means *pull in English
TERHEK
HEKTER=
HEKTOR
HECTOR
Just two simple passes. Where only O has changed in the change of simply O>A>E>.
HECTOR
Just two simple passes. Where only O has changed in the change of simply O>A>E>.
Is this a coincidence of form and thought of two words?
No at all.
Someone rightfully asked me if you named Hector after he was dragged along, and he didn't have a name given to him from birth.
I think that most of the mythical personages of important events, especially the wars fought between the powerful tribes of the time, which remain in the popular memory forever, have not a name given to them from birth, but derive their name from their fame, from some special characteristic, or his function, like Priam, an example because he was their first from the word composite "par/first and *am/to be, or even from some unusual event that happened contrary to their dockets that may have marked and left a long scar in the popular memory .
It is very possible that the name of the prince of Troy arose from this unusual event of Hector, since he was Dardanus and Trojan and in their code of honor no action was allowed on the body of the victim, a tradition that the Albanians have shown throughout their several thousand years of history and kept alive as such until modern times.
Such an event has certainly left a mark on the popular consciousness and memory and it is very likely that the drag after death was the reason for taking the name HEKTOR.
Linguists, historians, and Greco-Roman linguistic nationalist ideology do not accept it because it demolishes the Greek name and Homer's books written in the so-called ancient "Greek" language.
No at all.
Someone rightfully asked me if you named Hector after he was dragged along, and he didn't have a name given to him from birth.
I think that most of the mythical personages of important events, especially the wars fought between the powerful tribes of the time, which remain in the popular memory forever, have not a name given to them from birth, but derive their name from their fame, from some special characteristic, or his function, like Priam, an example because he was their first from the word composite "par/first and *am/to be, or even from some unusual event that happened contrary to their dockets that may have marked and left a long scar in the popular memory .
It is very possible that the name of the prince of Troy arose from this unusual event of Hector, since he was Dardanus and Trojan and in their code of honor no action was allowed on the body of the victim, a tradition that the Albanians have shown throughout their several thousand years of history and kept alive as such until modern times.
Such an event has certainly left a mark on the popular consciousness and memory and it is very likely that the drag after death was the reason for taking the name HEKTOR.
Linguists, historians, and Greco-Roman linguistic nationalist ideology do not accept it because it demolishes the Greek name and Homer's books written in the so-called ancient "Greek" language.
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