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[–] 2 pts (edited )

I can't directly address that.

But, Hebrew appears to be very closely related to Yiddish. Yiddish is the precursor to old German. Yiddish is an aryan language.

Yiddish, Hebrew, ancient Egyptian, and Welsh, are all closely related. Yiddish and Welsh are confirmed aryan languages. See tribe of Dan for this connection.

Much of what has been taught of our past is not true.

I've typed up a long comment, somewhat sourced, on some of this. If you're interested, I'll get you a link tonight. It's a rabbit hole.

Edit: i'm saying it is possible.

[–] 2 pts

Interested.

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Nice

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Don't know about who you're responding to, but I'd love to look at your comment. Please hit me up.

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Any info on the blonde and blue eyed original rulers of India?

Yiddish is basically high middle german. It has some hebrew loan words. Hebrew is not an indo-euro language though, it's a semetic language. Egyptian is not believed to be Indo-european or semetic.

[–] 0 pt (edited )

Actually there is no smoking gun one way or the other. They are, however, very closely related. And is more than likely that Hebrew is the precusor for Yiddish. Though as I said, no smoking gun one way or the other.

Edit: And more modern research is tying ancient egyptian to Yiddish, Hebrew, and Welsh. The Welsh tie in, in turn, ties back to Tribe of Dan. Which in turn has ties to Greeks, Romans, and many Scandanavian countries, and so on.

[–] [deleted] 1 pt (edited )

I'm no language expert, but I have spent a fair amount of time on the subject. I've always read that yiddish is based on high middle german and that it has heavy hebrew influence, but you're right, deciding which is the base language and what influenced it can be a matter of judgement. Given that yiddish is the language of the ashkenazi and that they arrived in central europe around the time of the khazar collapse which was the middle ages, I figured the theory that it's based on middle aged german makes sense.

As for welsh, I learned that it's a dialect of gailic which is definitely Indo-european as the celts were basically an earlier wave of germanics, originating from the same place.

Supposedly proto-indoeuropean and proto-afroasiatic came from the same place though. There are supposedly 300-400 root words with the same sounds and concepts. Afro-asiatic would include things like canaanite, egyptian, arabic, and akkadian.

Interesting topic, thanks for bringing it up.