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It is a fact now well understood that our English language is of the Indo-European family of languages spoken in all areas of European settlement. ‘Arian’ now referred to as ‘Indo-European’, consists of subgroups:- Celtic languages, Germanic languages, Indo-Iranian, Armenian, Albanian, Greek, Latin and its descendant Romance languages, Latvian, Lithuanian, the Slavonic group of languages Russian, Polish, Czech, Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and many more…. in fact about half the world’s peoples do speak what is basically the Arian language of the ‘Brahman Philosophy’.
By its grammatical construction, the Arian language speaks to us of its past existences and is detectable in the Semitic languages of North Africa and the Middle East, including Hebrew and Aramaic (ibhri > Hebrew ; Aramaic< ebhrai, Israelite, meaning one from the opposite side). Today Hebrew and Arabic are the modern forms.
The Dictionary of Etymology records the roots of our language, whereby it painstakingly explains the earliest know written records of many thousands of words now transcribed from script and text into the Roman (Latin) alphabet. This dictionary is a study of the etymology (truth) and traces the origin of previously recorded words documented from Asian-Arian and through the various interrelated European-Arian vocabulary that has descended by means of communication, through trade and conflicts, historical records and the propaganda of doctrinal religious literature.
However, the dictionary of etymologies does explain that the precise origin of many a word remains yet unknown, presumably there is no documented evidence that the authors have cited.
Explained in the pages of this book are what I have observed in the make up of our written grammar and how a specific alphabetical code reveals the philosophical thinking that created our language.