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----- Original Message ----- From: "M G Parker Pearson" <M. Parker-Pearson@sheffield.ac.uk> To: "ywk" < ygwnkm@hotmail.com> Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 6:33 PM Subject: Re: Stonehenge
> Dear Young-Won Kim > > Thank you for your email. We think 'henge' derives from the Saxon word for > 'hang' which may be a reference to the lintels being raised up or to the > similarity of them to gallows for hanging criminals. > > Best wishes > > Mike Parker Pearson
----- Original Message ----- From: ygwnkm To: M. Parker-Pearson@sheffield.ac.uk Sent: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 8:35 PM Subject: 'henge' derives from the Saxon word
Dear Mike Parker Pearson.
Conventional linguistics has big problem/errors since conventional linguisticians do not know phonetics and modern/present/current world/university phonetics is regretfully wrong/fake.
http://www.omniglot.com/writing/index.htm , The above site does not show anything on Saxon word/speaking; so, I will no longer mention Saxon word/speaking/etc.
Phonetically, "Canterbury" is Phoenician. If I articulate "Canter" from English speaking posture, "New" is pronounced. Vice versa. And if I articulate "bury" from English speaking posture, "village" is pronounced. Vice versa. So, "Canterbury" is equal to "Newvillage".
Phonetically, "Birmingham" is Phoenician. If I articulate "Birming" from English speaking posture, "Sky" is pronounced. Vice versa. And if I articulate "ham" from English speaking posture, "town" is pronounced. Vice versa. So, "Birmingham" is equal to "Skytown".
I now find nearly all English geographic names are phonetically Phoenician.
Durham; Porttown. York: Ore??
/P: English primary posture of cp on the vocal CORDS slanted backwards/below and bp on the lowest neck/throat. /S: English secondary posture of cp in the mouth or nasal cavity & bp in the mouth.
/T: Tertiary (that is, Phoenician/Canaanite) posture of both cp/bp on the lowest neck/throat. * See the article of “How are NUMBERs of English and Korean/Japanese/Chinese/etc. articulated/spoken?” <<Column 3>>
/C1: presumed to be 1708 CYRILLIC primary posture of cp on the vocal CORDS, much shifted/leaned/slanted backward and bp between the upper/front teeth. /C2: presumed to be 1708 CYRILLIC secondary posture of cp on the vocal CORDS, much shifted/leaned/slanted backward and bp between the lower/front teeth. ** See the article of “So many languages, so many speaking mouth postures (II).” <<Column 24. CYRILLIC alphabet (Кириллица)>>
http://voicespec.com/board.cgi?id=test1
http://voicespec.com/
Article/subject of "Why alternative ‘of –‘ for poss. ‘-’s’? woman/gentleman; Gandhara/한국, Parthia/Japan; Korea/Core"
3. Seoul or [sΛ (ŋ)ul] (Korea/T + ’s/P); Tokyo (Japan/T + ’s/P); London (England/T + ’s/P); Paris (France/T + ’s/P); Beijing (China/T + ’s/P); Stockholm (Sweden/T + ’s/P); Helsinki (Finland/T + ’s/P); Oslo (Norway/T + ’s/P); Lisbon (Portugal/T + ’s/P);
* I am surprised at the fact that the Korean capital name of “Seoul/Konglish or more correctly [sΛ (ŋ)ul]/서울” (can) be loan/borrow/originated from English.
Re: Article of “h/ŋ/tail, g/k/n, CYRILLIC-loan adj./nouns, Speaker standpoint.” <<Column 3, Sets of 4/four words & Speaker standpoint: Cilumn 4. (Japan/Nippon/)日本/일본[ŋil bon], 韓國/한국[han gug], 百濟/백제[bæg je], 高麗/고려[go r(iΛ)].>>
Berlin/Bonn/Hamburg/Köln (Goth/T + ’s/P); Russia/Moscow/Siberia/Kremlin (German/T + ’s/P); England/Scotland/Wales/Ireland (Viking/T + ’s/P); Spain/Portugal/Madrid/Barcelona (Vandal/T + ’s/P); Norway/Viking/Sweden/Finland (Angle/T + ’s/P); France/Gaul/Switzerland/Belgium (Frank/T + ’s/P); Poland/Hungary/Czech/Slovakia (Saxon/T + ’s/P); Austria/Wien/Munich/Salzburg (Burgundian/T + ’s/P); Germany/Denmark/Netherlands/Luxemburg (Nervii/T + ’s/P); Greece/Egypt/Turkey/Iraq (Crete/T + ’s/P); Arabia/Kuwait/Libya/Syria (Cyprus/T + ’s/P); Arizona/Texas/Mexico/Guatemala (Orleans/T + ’s/P); Panama/Brazil/Colombia/Venezuela (Isabella/T + ’s/P); Asia/Europe/Africa/America (Minos/T + ’s/P); * Miami/Ch/+bp, Michigan/Ch/+cp, Ohio/+bp, Indiana/+cp (Illinois/T + ’s/P);
* Canada/Montreal/Toronto/Ottawa (Paris/T + ’s/P);
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61.102.187.158 - Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1)

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