Monday, January 18, 2016

EVEN “HAM” WORDS ARE KOSHER



The intro:

EVEN “HAM” WORDS ARE KOSHER.

Or, at least, from Hebrew. But not from Hebrew nationals. The roots of words have nothing to do with humans or history -- not even with those mysteriously indestructible Hebrews from the Late Bronze Age.  The roots of human vocabulary were not evolved from animal signals. Our new evidence shows that the roots of words are designed uniquely for the homo sapiens brain. They are universal, from Modern Man’s first homeland, “Eden,” 20 long generations before the first “Hebrew” or Jew. (It’s just that Biblical Hebrew best preserves these “Edenic” roots and words.) In our lifetimes the massive evidence for a “Tower of Babel”-type of “confusion” which scrambled that language of Eden in an Executive Diversity Order
is being unearthed by our global team of Edenicists.

HAM is the thigh. The SHANK bone is the thigh bone. Many “”ham” words are nasalized (extra N) versions of the Edenic or Biblical Hebrew: שוק  SHOAQ (thigh). 

 
The entry in E-Word: Edenics Digital Dictionary

SHA(N)K       SHOAQ          Shin-Vav-Koof
SHOAK          שוק      [SH-K à SH +N K]
ROOTS: The SHANK is the leg, the knee to the ankle, or the upper foreleg (as in a cut of beef).  Anglo-Saxon scanc is akin to the base of German Schenkel (thigh). The hypothetical IE base and root are squeng (to squat, stoop, bend) and skeng (crooked).
   שחחSHa[K]Ha[K]H is bowed or stooped.  See “SAG.” The body part that allows for squatting is also an SH-K sound.   שוק  SHOAQ is a leg or foreleg (Leviticus 7:33).  The extra N of SHANK is a common nasalization.
Most global “leg” words appear in entries like “CANE” and “LEG.” Germanic “leg” words often echo “bone,” as the femur is the longest, strongest bone. Below is the third leg of global “leg” words from Edenic.

BRANCHES:  Most of the fricative-guttural words below do fit the thigh-shank tradition translation of  שוק  SHOAQ. Possible exceptions slighty out of range include: Old High German hahsa (shin), Old Irish coss (foot) and Irish coss (leg).

 At all these terms the extra N of nasalization was not present; nasalization usually adds an N before a guttural like K.
The European words for "ham" are almost all SNK terms. German Schinken (ham) is clearly akin to Schenkel (thigh) above. Even the Modern Hebrew for "ham" is חזיר  שוק  SHOAQ [K]HaZeeYR (leg of swine). HAM and SHIN resemble the many S-(H)-I-N-(K) terms for "ham" among Scandinavian, Slavic and Finno-Ugric languages.
SHIN words might be from the nasalized  שוק  SHOAQ with the end-guttural dropped.    Taka is the Quechua leg, probably a variation of the Quechua “thigh” word which is in  the chart below.  The TH-GH of THIGH is close to this TK version of  שוק   SHOAQ. The IE “root” connects the THIGH to the thumb with a root meaning “swollen.” The IE “root” of COXA (hip) is koksa (body part), with cognates CUISSE and CUSHION (see “CUSHION”).  CUSHION is more likely from  כסת Ke$eT, pillow, cushion (Ezekiel 13:18).
In the Americas, SK leg words can be disguised like cotz-tli, calf of the leg
 (ß   S-F S-G) in  Nahautl (Aztec).
שוק    SHOAQ is translated “thigh,” but is easily the source of SHANK, hip, leg, thigh and haunch words. For  SCIATICA (a thigh, hip disorder), see the Greek below.   The table below lets us know that many peoples recalled this SK “leg” word, and used it for a wide variety of related anatomical meanings.


Anglo-Saxon, Old English
Sc an C
shank
Arabic
S a Q
leg
Azerbajani  rev. of qiḉ
C i  Q
thigh
Belarusian
Sc ia Hno
hip
Bosnian, Bulgarian,
Croatian, Czech, Macedonian, Slovenian
SH un Ka
ham
Czech rev. of kyčel
 leČ yK
haunch
Czech, Serbo-Croatian
SH un Ka
ham
Danish, Norwegian
Sk in Ka
ham
Dutch
SCHaCHt
shank, shaft
Estonian rev. of kints
St ni K
thigh, haunch, ham
French rev. of cuissot
toSS iuC
haunch, hip
German
SH en Kel
thigh, shank, leg of triangle
German
SH in Ken
ham
Greek ισχίο
iS CHío
haunch
Greek
iSKHion
hip (whence SCIATIC)
Hungarian
S on Ka
ham
Italian rev. of coscia
ai cS o C
thigh, haunch, leg,ham
Japanese rev. koshi
iSH  oK
hip
Latin, Portug. rev. of coxa
aX OC
hip-bone
Latvian
ciS-Ka or CiS ka
thigh, haunch
Latvian rev. of gūža
aZ uG
hip
Middle English SHANK
SH an Ke

Old English source of   
                         THIGH
TH ēoH
thigh
Old French, French rev. of
                         cuisse
eSS iuC
thigh; CUISH or CUISSE is a thigh protector (armor)
Old French rev. of hanche
eCH n aH
HAUNCH (upper thigh)
Polish
SZ yn Ka
ham
Quechua
CH aKa
thigh
Rumanian
S un Ca
ham
Slovak
ŠunKa
ham
Sumerian  rev. of haš 
Šah
thigh                  [SW]
Swedish
SchenKel
leg, femur
Swedish
SKänKel
shank, leg
Swedish
SKinKa
ham
Tai   สะโพก (Vav S-B to PH)
a ph oK
haunch
Turkish rev of kıç, kalça
ç K
hip, haunch
Ukrainian
Shynka
ham
Welsh  rev. of coes
S oe C
shank