Some Common Words in Sanskrit, English and German Language

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Uploaded by on Jul 11, 2009

Some Common Words in Sanskrit, English and German language

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Education

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

  • are those native sanskrit words?

  • @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

  • nothing special british and german new they were aryans

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

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

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

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

  • @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

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