INTRODUCTION…………BABA NA MES (PATER NOSTER)…………HOME
KEY
ENGLISH WORD - HERE
SPET WORD - Here (pronunciation) <additional information, such as plurals, here>
EVIDENCE - Here
/KEY
ENGLISH - S/PT
TO BREAST FEED
Mlka (meh-leh-kah)
Proto-Afro-Asiatic mlg 'suck, breast, udder'
Arabic m-l-j 'suck the breast'
Old Egyptian mndy 'woman's breast, udder'
Proto-Indo-European melg- 'to milk'
English milk 'to milk, milk'
Latin mulg-e:re 'to milk'
Proto-Finno-Ugric mälke 'breast'
Saami mielga 'breast'
Hungarian mell 'breast'
Tamil melku 'to chew'
Malayalam melluka 'to chew'
Kurux melkha: 'throat'
Central Yupik melug- 'to suck'
Proto-Amerind maliq'a 'to swallow, throat'
Halkomelem m@lqw 'throat'
Kwakwala m'lXw-'id 'chew food for the baby'
Kutenai u'mqolh 'to swallow'
Takelma mülk' 'to swallow'
Tfaltik milq 'to swallow'
Mixe amu'ul 'to suck'
Mohave malyaqe' 'throat'
Walapei malqi' 'throat, neck'
Akwa'ala milqi 'neck'
Cuna murki- 'to swallow'
Quechua malq'a 'throat'
Aymara malyq'a 'throat'
Iranshe moke'i 'neck'
Guamo mirko 'to drink'
Surinam e'mo:kï 'to swallow'
Faai mekeli 'nape of the neck'
Kaliana imukulali 'throat'
TO DRAW (In modern times: "to write, literacy, and written language")
Lga (leh-gah)
Latin: lingua
/lIngw@/ "language; tongue; speech"Icelandic: rita /rIta/ "to write" (related to lingua, "l" is related to "r" and "t" and "d" are related, and "d" and "n" are related
)Swahili: lugha /lugha/ "language; tongue" (related to lingua - "g" is the opposite of "ng")
FATHER
Baba (bah-bah) pl. -s
Father Latin: papa Icelandic: fafa Finnish: isä Chinese: baba Swahili: baba English: papa S/pt: baba
GOD
Ela (el-ah) pl. -s
L: sanctus I: heilagur F: jumala C: shangdi S: allah E: saint S/pt: (sh)e(ng)/d@
Note: "God" was searched for both Finnish and Swahili, and, basing this on the fact that the Hebrew word for "god" is "el," we might be able to say that "ela" was the PWL word for "god."
HEAVEN
Tim (tim) pl. -I
L: caelum I: taivas F: himinn C: tian S: ? E: heaven S/pt: tim
HOLY
(sh)e(ng)/d@ (shayng-duh)
L: sanctus I: heilagur F: jumala C: shangdi S: allah E: saint S/pt: (sh)e(ng)/d@
IN
Sn (sen)
Latin: in Icelandic: in Finnish: -ssa Chinese: huozhe Swahili: katika English: in S/pt: sn
LANGUAGE (Spoken)
S/pt (spet) pl. -i (ee)
Ancient Egyptian: isp.t "speech," "tongue" /isept/
English: speech /spItS/, language /lENguidZ/
Finnish: sana /sana/ "word" (look at "isp.t" - "t" is often mistaken as "d", and sometimes in evolution, it becomes an "n," and the consonant cluster "sp" does not exist in Finnish - and apparently European languages put the vowel after the "p" instead of before)
Mandarin Chinese: shetou "tongue" (related to "isp.t")
ME
Me (meh, may) pl. -s
Latin: me Icelandic: me Finnish: ? Japanese: watashi Swahili: ? English: me S/pt: me
NAME
Nine (nee-neh) pl. -s
L: nomen I: nafn F: nimi C: mingzi; xing S: jina E: name S/pt: nine
OF
Na (nah)
Latin: de Icelandic: um Finnish: kenan Japanese: (-)no Swahili: -a English: of S/pt: na
THE
El (el)
Note: this word varies throughout the world, but looking at some of the oldest languages, like Hebrew, we can assume that "el" was the word for "the"
WITH
Kan (kahn)
L: con I: við F: kanssa C: gen S: ? E: and S/pt: kan