REPORT ABUSIVE REPLY
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Message Subject
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I'm confused about Enki - somebody clarify
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Poster Handle
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Anonymous Coward |
Post Content
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>no one still cant answer how the words were translated if the pronunciation wasn't known..there's a big hole there that cant be filled by logic,why is that?
going through life, I can just state that I have talked to people from every country in the middle east encompassing 40 years.. arabic is related to hebrew, they can almost understand each other.. all of these languages are related..
Quoting: Anonymous Coward 25460442 after Sumerian, the massive language that lasted for 1000 years is Aramaic.. probably more well developed than english since it lasted such a long time.. some of these such as akkadian are pretty well minor offshoots of aramaic, however, all of them are closely, closely related.. it is painful to watch this.. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 25460442 a thousand years you say,hmmm wheres all those Sumerians buried at that lived and died in all that thousand years? in a thousand years of human breeding they could cover the globe with descendants and relics,but where are the bodies and all that relic stuff they would have needed to survive during a thousand years?... Quoting: T Ceti H.C. Radnarg Wiki Aramaic: During its 3,000-year written history,[4] Aramaic has served variously as a language of administration of empires and as a language of divine worship. It was the day-to-day language of Israel in the Second Temple period (539 BC – 70 AD), the language spoken by Jesus,[5][6] the language of large sections of the biblical books of Daniel and Ezra, and is the main language of the Talmud.. Wiki Old Aramaic: I. Old Aramaic A. Ancient Aramaic – 11th century BCE to approximately 500 BCE. B. Imperial Aramaic – The official language of the western part of the Persian empire from approx. 500 BCE to approx. 200 CE, but may be divided into various dialects beginning in the second century BCE. C. Old Eastern Aramaic and Old Western Aramaic – largely contemporary with Imperial Aramaic, but not used for official documents. II. Middle Aramaic – from approx. 200 CE and extending throughout the Middle Ages.
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