Added: 2 years ago
From: bhagavadgita4u
Views: 6,433
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (18)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • are those native sanskrit words?

  • nothing special british and german new they were aryans

  • San-Skrit=hidden dream in slavic language...sutra=tomorow...on this link you can see how similar slaven words are with san-skrit

  • @JimmyBarca SanSkrit was SamSkrit originally. And means "self hidden". Language which was derived from Pra(grand, old) Krit (covered)

  • Nothing to surprise. All the Indo-European languages are derived form the Sanskrit.

  • @vedistan not true... it was vice versa- Samskrit was created language and coded for a reason... to remain Veda (knowledge)

  • @vedistan so does that mean that caucasian people came from india?

  • The word Veda, meaning 'to know' is directly related to Swedish 'veta', Dutch 'weten', German 'wissen' and English 'wise'. sadhana - realisation saadhana - reason saadhana - proof [ Logic ] sadana - house Under-S*TaN-d Dutch verSTaNd (=intelligence) Swedish förSTåNd German verSTeheN These meanings stem from the ancient Logic of the Ancestors of the Europoid peoples.They related their Godly concept of knowledge to their blood: their House, their Sadana, the Kot (=house) of the good.
  • Comment removed

  • @birthgod The word Veda means 'knowledge' and it has, linguistically, nothing to do with English 'wise' or German 'wissen'. Only similarity is 'v' and 'w' in these cases is pronounced similarly and that wise is a word which can be associated, ethically, with knowledgeable.

  • @thedarkchamber2005 Nah, it's not a coincidence. Proto-IE /*d/ stays /*d/ in Sanskrit, therefore "veda", also /*d/ in Italic, therefore Latin "video". Same with Slavic: Russian "ведать". In Germanic, it is shifted to /*t/: Swedish "veta" and English "wit", Dutch "weten". In German, it is further shifted to /s/: "wissen". This is one of the most recognized Indo-European roots and is acknowledged by almost all linguists.

  • @bla287 not only Russian Vedat. VEDA is Slovene MODERN word - as also Sanskrit & Slovene verb conjugations in Dual (between plural and singular) .. Veda is Slavic original root and word. Regards to "Video" means "to see" - Videt in Slavic. Vedet or Vedat means "to know " (comes from Veda)

    there was no "info european" language. It is occult artificial hoax

  • @VendPrekmurec Of course there are slight differences in meaning, even between "close" German and English (nearest common ancestor ~2000-2500y ago) there are cognates which do not have 100% same meaning (blade-Blatt, corn-Korn, edge-Ecke...) so in case of IE (>5000y) even bigger differences have to be expected. Other words like numbers 1-10 are very similar though, do you really think it's coincidence? Why do you assume a conspiration? I don't see why anyone would do that and for which benefit.

  • @thedarkchamber2005 example "Rg / Rig Veda" is Slovene "Rek Veda " (sentence, words of knowledge).. Germanic Veta was derived from old Slavic (pra-Krit (original Sanskrit) language - when "Sanskrit" was Artificial language, written for Rg Veda... in cca 5000-6000 Bc

  • @birthgod Unfortunately, I have not yet any knowledge regarding Sanskrit. Linguistically you might be right. If "Veda" means "knowlegde" it has exactly the same meaning as the German word "Wissen"(noun) ["wissen"=verb], though. "wise" means "weise" in German (German"ei" pronounced like English "i"), and knowlegde, to be sure, is not wisdom. Let us strive for both wisdom and knowledge, cause, as a proverb goes:"Knowledge without intelligence is useless. Intelligence without knowledge is dangerous

  • Comment removed

  • breathing in german is "ATMEN"... soul in sanskrit is "ATMAN"

  • Comment removed

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more