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Pannous edited this page Jun 12, 2020 · 8 revisions

Sanskrit is shockingly similar to Germanic and other branches of PIE

Englishโ€‡โ€‡Latinโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡Greekโ€‡โ€‡Sanskrit
motherโ€‡โ€‡ mฤterโ€‡โ€‡ mฤ“tฤ“rโ€‡โ€‡ mฤtรกr-
fatherโ€‡โ€‡ paterโ€‡โ€‡ paterโ€‡โ€‡ pitรกr-
brotherโ€‡ frฤterโ€‡ phreterโ€‡ bhrฤtar-
sisterโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ sororโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ eorโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ svรกsar-
sonโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ fฤซliusโ€‡ huiusโ€‡โ€‡ sลซnรบ-
daughterโ€‡ fฤซliaโ€‡ thugรกtฤ“rโ€‡ duhitรกr-
cowโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ bลsโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ bousโ€‡โ€‡โ€‡โ€‡ gรกu-
houseโ€‡โ€‡ domusโ€‡โ€‡ doโ€‡โ€‡ dฤm-

The resemblance goes a lot deeper, even More so if one allows for small orthographic corrections to the modern reading, especially concerning the odd modern Hindu โ€ždangling iโ€œ which was just an ordinary fi : เคชเคฟ ๏ฌ€i

Both เคชเคฟ เคชเฅ€ and should be transcribed as fi and fi, namely fphi and phfi or fi+p and p+fi, similar to the f in physics.

Sanskrit เคถเคฐเฅ€เคฐ (ล›arฤซra, โ€œbodyโ€ž)
Alternative orthographic transcription: เคถเคฐเฅ€เคฐ = ร‡orfir Kรถrper < vir

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