And what do you think of the Basque "hortz" in the meaning of "tooth" (meanwhile "hortsi" in Georgian means "meat")? In linguistics there are many cases of shifting the meaning from the action tool onto the object of the action and vice versa.
- Home
- ABOUT US
- OUR WORK
- __Kartvelian Etymologies
- __+120m Sea Level
- __Real Troy
- __Argonauts' Itinerary
- __Pre-Columbian America
- __Revised Histories
- OUR STUNNERS
- FIELD
- OTHER LANGUAGES
- __Albanian
- __Arabic
- __Basque
- __Belarussian
- __Berber
- __Breton
- __Bulgarian
- __Catalan
- __Chinese
- __Corsican
- __Croatian
- __Czech
- __Danish
- __Estonian
- __Filipino
- __Finnish
- __French
- __Frisian
- __Galician
- __German
- __Georgian
- __Greek
- __Hebrew
- __Hindi
- __Hungarian
- __Icelandic
- __Indonesian
- __Irish Gaelic
- __Japanese
- __Kazakh
- __Korean
- __Latvian
- __Lithuanian
- __Norwegian
- __Occitan
- __Polish
- __Portuguese
- __Romanian
- __Scottish Gaelic
- __Serbian
- __Spanish
- __Swedish
- __Thai
- __Turkish
- __Ukrainian
- __Uzbek
- __Welsh
- __Wolof
- GLOSSARY
- LEGAL & PRICING
- __Terms & Conditions
- __Privacy Policy
- __Refund Policy
- __Pricing
- JOIN PREMIUM
0 Comments