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pannous edited this page Jul 19, 2024 · 36 revisions

Verbs often have suffix -ier

  1. faire 𓅨𓅩
  2. gir=go 𓅪𓅫 𓂻

𓄤 fair

Verbs often have prefix:
𓁹 ⲓⲉⲣ ⋍ ⲓⲣⲓ ⇔ ⲁⲣⲓ faire > re-… ⲉⲣ- er-… ver… faire
𓁹 ⲉⲣ faire ubiquitous coptic particle / prefix / half-verb be

𐀸𐀭 weʳsa Fεσσα √faire werk work make
𐀁𐀸 e-weʳ έFει effort

𔖿 𔗬 -nuwa ⇔ 𓊪 𓋴 𓆓 pose'don «put into place» 'causative' suffix

ⲟⲩⲣⲟ: king =>
ⲉⲣⲟⲩⲣⲟ be king, reign
ⲓⲣⲓ ⲛⲟⲩⲣⲟ make king

ⲓⲣⲓ ⲛⲃⲉⲣⲓ = renew, erneuern, make new (√ⲃⲉⲣⲓ pure,new)

From Middle High German ver-, from Old High German far-, from a mixture of Proto-Germanic *firi-, *fra-, *furi- and other similar particles. Cognate with English for-, Dutch ver-, Yiddish פֿאַר־ (far-), Gothic 𐍆𐌰𐌹𐍂- (fair-), 𐍆𐌰𐌿𐍂- (faur-), 𐍆𐍂𐌰- (fra-), Latin per-.

It belongs to the Eurasian Proto pro per for für … preposition cluster with slightly different connotations ⇔ fore

𓇋 𓂝 verb prefix versus faire ver-

BE bar bear > faire
Turkish: var (tr)
Norwegian: vera (nn), vere (nn)
Ladin: vester IST

𓋴 𓈖 𓃀 𓏜 sane.bar ⇔ wunderbar *-bēriz -bearing faire ⇔ -able, -ible

𒁷 ≈ 𒌋𒁇𒌋 bar ≈ faire ≈ 𒆕

𐤐𐤏𐤋 pan faire pʿl "do"

fait

𒌑𒌌 𒀀𒁉 𒀜𒋫 𒌑𒌌 𒌝𒈪 𒀜𒋾 “ul abī atta; ul ummī atti” “you are not my father ; you are not my mother” PUN

𒀜 ᶠad / ᶠád / ᶠát father #abu

𒀜𒋫 at-ta as-toi est-toi 𒀜𒋫 you (are) 𒀜𒋾 at-ti as-tu est-tu 𒀜𒋾 you (are) (feminine) <> fait faire

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