Re: Some links about Uralic languages
in reply to a message by Mari
I must also add that Finnish is said to be the 'icebox' of (Indo-)European languages. Over the centuries, the interaction between the Finnish people and the rest of Europe has made quite an impact in the Finnish language. A number of originally Indo-European structures and words have survived 'deep-frozen' in Finnish, relatively unchanged. A text-book example is the Finnish word 'kuningas' (king). Etymologists have reconstructed the original Indo-European form to be *kuningaz. The word was obviously borrowed into Finnish at an early stage. In other languages, the present-day words deriving from that root have obviously gone through major changes: 'king' (English), 'König' (German), 'kung' (Swedish) etc.
Lass
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Messages

Why are the Fins called Fins?  ·  Andy  ·  9/30/2004, 9:46 AM
Re: Why are the Fins called Fins?  ·  Lassia  ·  9/30/2004, 10:20 AM
Re: Why are the Finns called Finns?  ·  Andy  ·  9/30/2004, 12:28 PM
Re: Why are the Finns called Finns?  ·  Chrisell  ·  9/30/2004, 10:19 PM
Re: Why are the Finns called Finns?  ·  Andy  ·  9/30/2004, 10:46 PM
Re: Why are the Finns called Finns?  ·  Chrisell  ·  9/30/2004, 11:21 PM
Finnia is not Latin  ·  Andy  ·  9/30/2004, 11:50 PM
Re: Finnia is not Latin  ·  Chrisell  ·  10/1/2004, 12:06 AM
Re: Finnia is not Latin  ·  Andy  ·  10/1/2004, 5:14 AM
Lol - that didn't help! :-D nt  ·  Chrisell  ·  10/1/2004, 5:29 AM
Re: Finnia is not Latin  ·  Andy  ·  10/1/2004, 12:44 AM
Re: Finnia is not Latin  ·  Mari  ·  10/1/2004, 6:21 AM
Some links about Uralic languages  ·  Mari  ·  10/1/2004, 6:29 AM
Re: Some links about Uralic languages  ·  Andy  ·  10/1/2004, 7:17 AM
Re: Some links about Uralic languages  ·  Mari  ·  10/1/2004, 7:49 AM
Re: Some links about Uralic languages  ·  Lassia  ·  10/2/2004, 9:45 AM
Re: Some links about Uralic languages  ·  Andy  ·  10/1/2004, 10:09 AM