Indo-European

 

                Maybe you summarize so the west London community of mixed traces “Conjobe” speakers in the middest of an English support.

(A man talking, but he changes the language) An Indapore language of modulating with this child object…

What could these two languages Conjobe and English have in common; in fact English and Conjoby as well as other languages of north of India, like Indy an Gojalaty are related something discovered by chance 2.000 years ago by a multilingual English lawyer Sir. William Jonen.

He was a judge who went to India in 1783 but he studied languages already at the languages before he went, and when he got to India, he became very interested and learned Sanscript which is the language of ancient India which was first written about 500 ad and then he realized that he made this great discover. The Sanscript resemble in some way have relationship between Greek and Latin and other languages and he gave very famous discourse in which he said this was brought from some common sources.

It is surprising that no one has brought the resemblances earlier. Take the numbers again, for example, the sanscript on the right has a strong resemblance to Latin, and Greek on the left. While one, two, three obvious, four and five in the closest lack has got the connection. Linguistics has discovered rules that doesn’t have sounds in different languages, are related; look at the words for four, this is one of many examples where the word beginning with “g” in Latin said, is similar a Greek word beginning with “t”, and the sanscript word beginning with “k”, this sound correspondences can reveal have apparently unrelated languages at members of the same families. The question is, how can you tell that the languages you are looking at reflect a single original language and there forth form of family, the only way you can do that is by finding systematic similarities between these languages and every area of their grammar similarities and their sounds similarities and other inflections similarities in the syntax of the languages. And so forth, the similarities have to be very precise and they have to be interlocking for the assertions that this languages form of families are to be beliable. We take a look at an English word like tooth and see it in Indian “dant” and by itself doesn’t mean very much, but you take a look at the English “ten” and it shows up in Indy as “das” and you see the same pattern emerging you got and initial “t” in English and an initial “d” in Indy. When you find that, the word “two”, the numeral, in English shows up; in indies “do”, you’ve got ones again an initial “t” in English and an initial “d” in Indy, you begin to think that perhaps this is not an accident.

Language has now established that the whole range of languages straching from Iceland to India form one family called Indo-European.

They can even reconstruct an earlier insister of these languages proto Indo-European.

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