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Re: Philistinic



--- In westasianconlangs@yahoogroups.com, "Isaac Penzev" 
<isaacp@...> wrote:
>
> habarakhe4 wrote:
> 
> 
> > --- In westasianconlangs@yahoogroups.com, "Isaac Penzev"
> > <isaacp@> wrote:
> > >
> > > habarakhe4 wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > > I haven't gotten very far, but here are some features of the
> > more
> > > > common radicals:
> > > > III-W
> > > > III-Y
> > > > II-M/N
> > > > I-S
> > >
> > > I'd love to know what it means...
> > >
> > > -- Yitzik
> > >
> > Would Pe, Ayin, and Lamedh be clearer than I, II, III?
> >
> > Lamedh-Waw roots come from the o- and u-declensions of Greek: 
ik_wo-
> > > *yaqaw
> >
> > Lamedh-Yodh roots come from the Greek bilateral roots + the y 
that
> > disappeared in Greek and gave contract conjugations: KAL+ Y > 
kaleyo
> > > kaleo & > *kalay
> >
> > Ayin-Mem/Nun roots come from the n-insertion in certain IE roots:
> > LAB > lambano/elabe & > *lamab
> >
> > Pe-Samekh roots come from the s- prefix often attached to the
> > initial consonants of IE stems: pek > Lat. specio, Gk. skepyo & >
> > *sakap
> 
> Awfully intriguing. I'm sorry I failed to understand the original 
message. I
> was thinking in the terms of *Semitic* morphology adapted to smth 
Greek, not
> vice versa as it turns out from your explanation.
> What about some other types, like, e.g. Lamedh-Ayin (or whatever 
laryngeal
> that may be responsible for elonagtions): leipo/elipe > L.3.P, huh?
> 
> -- the busy Yitz
>

I'd be using a different ethnic group (Lydian, perhaps) which came 
in the Philistine mishmash (is that Hebrew ;-)) for that feature.