Tuesday, November 20, 2018

LOST DOGS OF THE WORLD





All Lost Dogs Find Their Way Home... to Eden

 [Re-formatted by manner of “confounding" by Phil Van Riper]
 ß = reverse


KeLe(V) or KeLeBH (Canine)

כ ל ב  


Change Guide:
No change!

 Kahf-Guttural
 (Throat sound)

 Lamed-Liquid
 (Tongue sound)        

 Bhet Bilabial             
 (Lip sound)

Language






Ainu
northern Japan
fox
    
Kim
eL
oPP

Arabic
dog                           

Ka
L
B

Aramaic
dog                       

Ka
L
Ba

Hebrew
ancient & modern
dog

Ke
Le
V

Maltese
dog

K
eL           
B

Mon-Khmer (Monic branch - Cambodia)
dog

K
K
Lø
Lui
W
W

Norwegian 
puppy

 (source of              WHELP)
Kv
        
aL

P


Old High German
puppy
  (“    “)
Hw
eL
F

Swedish
wolf

G
Ra
V

Those six examples demonstrate some dog-related words that didn't get confused, confounded, mixed up.  They show words in Europe, the Middle East and northern Japan that are closely related even after thousands of miles and thousands of years.  With just an occasional shift of a letter's sound (Grimm's Law), each of these is seen and heard as obviously related to the early Biblical Hebrew.
_____________

The following examples from Europe, Persia and India demonstrate one of the most effective ways to confuse, confound, or mix up words.  Reverse them.
(Notice that the colored letter-sound columns are now in reverse order.)
כלב
KeLe(V) or KeLeBH  (Canine)
Change Guide:
Reversals
Bhet Bilabial
(Lip sound)
Lamed-Liquid
(Tongue sound)
Kahf-Guttural (Throat sound)
Language





Avestan
wolf
vehrka ß
Veh
R
Ka
Bulgarian
wolf
vilk ß
Vi
L
K
Czech
Wolf
vlk ß
V
L
K
Hungarian
wolf
farkas ß
Fa      
R
Kas
I-E root
Proto-Indo-European
wolf
wlkwo   ß
W        
L          
Kwo
Latvian
wolf
vilks ß
Vi    
L
Ks
Lithuanian
wolf
vilkas ß
Vi       
L
Kas
Mon-Khmer (Khmuic Branch)
wolf
phluk  ß
PH
L
K
 Old Persian
wolf
varka ß
Va        
R
Ka
 Polish
wolf
wilk ß
Wi
L
K
Proto-Germanic
wolf
* wulHwaz
W
L
H
Russian,    Slovenian.,Macedonian
wolf
volk ß
Vo
L
K
 Sanskrit
wolf
vrika ß           
V
Ri
Ka
 Sinhala
dog
bahl-laahß
Ba   
LLa      
aH
Swedish
wolf
varg ß
Va
R
G
 Zazaki
 Iranian, &
 Mazandarani & Parthian
wolf
verg ß
Ve
R
G
Languages like Serbian have “wolf” words like vuk, where the bilabial dropped.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this group the guttural letter was dropped.  Such changes might be natural, but perhaps something in the neuro-linguistic disturbance at Shinar (the Tower of Babel) made this possible.

כלב
KeLe(V) or KeLeBH
Change Guide:
Dropped Guttural
Kahf-Guttural (Throat sound)
Lamed-Liquid
(Tongue sound)
Bhet Bilabial
(Lip sound)
Language





Catalan
wolf


LL
oP
Danish
wolf


uL
Ven
French
Wolf


Lou
P
Finnish
fox


Re
Po
Galician
wolf

     
Lo
Bo
Icelandic
wolf


uL
Fer
Italian
wolf


Lu
Po
Latin
wolf


Lu
Pus
Lithuanian
fox


La
Pė
Norwegian
wolf


uL
F
OldHighGerman
wolf


woL
F
Portuguese
wolf


Lo
Bo
Old Icelandic
wolf


uL
Fr
Romanian
wolf


Lu
P
Samoan
fox


aL
oPe
Spanish
wolf


Lo
Bo
Sumerian
dog


La
BBu





In this group, it is the bilabial sound that was dropped.  Pronouncing the lip-made letter with such little stress would make it disappear in a generation or two.   
The languages here from Europe, North America and Austronesia.  If these diversifications were entirely natural, we’d expect more regional consistency.

כלב
 KeLe(V) (Canine)
Change Guide:
Dropped Bilabial
Kahf-Guttural (Throat sound)
Lamed-Liquid
(Tongue sound)
Bhet Bilabial
(Lip sound)
Language





Armenian
wolf

Gay
L

Cherokee
dog
 (or: gihli)
Qi'
Li

Chichewa/Bantu
dog
bilabial drop
Ga
L
U
Fijian
dog

Ko
Li

Finnish
dog

Koi
Ra

Georgian
wolf

mG
eLi

Maya/Tojo
coyote

oQ
iL

Modern Greek
dog

sKi'
Los

Maori
dog

K
uRi

Marathi
fox

Ko
Lhe

Polynesian/Tuvalu
dog

K
uLii

Portuguese
dog

C
Lio

Scottish
dog

Co
Lie

Tongan
dog

Cu
Li


Note: The table at the “LOBO” entry of E-Word is bigger. CUR (mixed breed dog) is thought to be a "growl" word (see "GROAN), but K-R "dog" words like  Balochi/Iranian gurkh (wolf), Basque txakurra (dog), Estonian koer, Finnish koira (above), Kurmanji/Iranian gur (wolf), Nepali kukur (dog) and Turkish kurt suggest that our Kahf-Lamed should not be ruled out as the source of K-R canines.   See COLLIE above.
The V in WOLVERINE is a closer remnant of the original Bhet/BH than the F of wolf.
A dropped guttural also happens, as with the Mohawk wolf: okwaho.  

The Edenic כ ל ב  KeLeBH, generic canine, and a combination of a KL and an LB element meaning "all heart,"  need not be "recalled" by many peoples.  The next most popular "dog" names appear to be linked to Edenic words meaning "tame,"  "domestic" and "hunt" (see HOUND atHUNT). 

Anthony Ehrhardt hears the guttural-L of  כלב KeLe(V) in the Tlingit (Alaska) dog:  ketl.  TL is often heard as 'L.'  The Navajo dog word reverses this to tleechaa'i.
In Maya/Yucatec, KeLeBH is reversed (common) and the liquid dropped (rare): peek’.

An isolated language group with strong traces of the Edenic dog is the Mon-Khmer family
in the Cambodia region researched by Fernando Aedo:

כלב   KeLe(V) or KeLeBH,  dog, wolf, canine [LOBO]

hmbrok wolf (noun) (Khmu [Cuang]: Khmuic Branch) ß
karià̰w fox (Chứt [Rục]: Vietic Branch) S-L S-B
khl  wolf  (Mương [Bi]: Vietic Branch)  bilabial drop
kløw,  kluiw dog (Old Mon: Monic Branch)  S-B
palik flying fox, fruit bat (Jahai: Aslian Branch)  ß
phluk wolf (Khsing-Mul: Khmuic Branch) ß


In Old Chinese below note how  כלב K-L-BH (dog) metathesized to KK-HW-ER. The lip-letter and the tongue letter have shifted. This is not natural language diversity
 due to historical, natural causes. It’s Babel babble. Why won’t the academics agree? You can’t teach old Darwinist dogs new deistic tricks.
Old Chinese
dog
kkhwer M132
S-L S-B
kk
R
W



[FA]  Dravidian (India): bal.ia_ a wild ferocious dog (Or.); vr.ka a kind of wild dog (Ta.lex.). Gujurati wolf: varu.

In Choctaw/ Amerind the fox has cleverly hid from KeLe(V) in a few ways:
fanakla,  fox, M312 N S-B <  כלב   KeLe(V), canine.