>>24056254
>>24056262
krs, na ,, krst. just sayn'
i think the phenome means "light'
According to official linguistic study there is no connection. Just sayn' Seems "coincidental"
There are numerous linguistic studies demonstrating systematic consistency in phonemes (the smallest units of sound in speech, often referred to as "phenomes") across Indo-European languages. This is a core aspect of comparative historical linguistics, where regular sound correspondences—patterns of how sounds evolve or correspond between related languages—are identified and analyzed. These correspondences help reconstruct Proto-Indo-European (the hypothetical ancestor language) and explain relationships between languages like English, Latin, Sanskrit, and Russian.For example:Regular sound changes, such as Grimm's Law, show consistent shifts in consonants (e.g., Proto-Indo-European *p becoming f in Germanic languages, as in "pater" in Latin corresponding to "father" in English).
researchgate.net
Computational models have been developed to automatically infer these sound correspondence patterns across multiple Indo-European languages, confirming their regularity through alignments and data analysis.
aclanthology.org
Studies on Proto-Indo-European phonology often highlight constraints and consistencies in root structures, predominantly CVC forms, which maintain phonological patterns across descendant languages.
sciencedirect.com
Digitized sound law systems have been verified for consistency in generating forms across over 100 archaic Indo-European languages from their proto-forms.
ceur-ws.org
These findings are well-established in the field and extend beyond just letter arrangements (graphemes) to focus on spoken sounds, though orthographic (writing) systems in Indo-European languages often reflect these phonological patterns to varying degrees
DARKNESS to Light?
Also root of the word "Education"?
no, it's just religious people riffing on the meaning of "to lead" into knowledge.
>>24056274