LanguageI sometimes refer to several different languages at this site, when I think about an ancient word. Many of present-day languages have been derived from the language of specific ancient times. For example, Aramaic script was widely adopted for other languages, and is ancestral to both the Arabic and modern Hebrew alphabets. And Hebrew is ancestral to Japanese. The two words, which resemble each other in a pronunciation, sometimes have a same meaning, although they are different in language. Therefore, I think, it has no problem that I refer to different languages, when I decode an ancient word. There is a way to apply all the same characters used most to "e". In Hebrew, a vowel and a consonant are one. All vowels may have been changed into "e." For example, "Adam" becomes "Eden" if Adam's vowel are all transposed to "e". The word which spelling resembles sometimes needs an analogical inference. INDEX |