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THE “NEW IMAGE” OF INDO-EUROPEAN AND THE NOSTRATIC HYPOTHESIS: A POSSIBLE RECONCILIATION OF RECONSTRUCTIONS

Publication date: 10.12.2011

Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, 2011, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 129 - 139

https://doi.org/10.4467/20843836SE.11.011.0057

Authors

Kenneth Shields Jr.
Millersville University English Department P.O. Box 1002, USA
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Titles

THE “NEW IMAGE” OF INDO-EUROPEAN AND THE NOSTRATIC HYPOTHESIS: A POSSIBLE RECONCILIATION OF RECONSTRUCTIONS

Abstract

The paper aims to explain the origin of two old Italian words of Turkish origin, cassasso ‘a Turkish police officer’ and pettomagi/pettomanzi ‘Turkish officer(s) dealing with the possesions of the dead’. Contrary to a previous etymology of his, the author’s present opinion is that cassasso derives from the Ottoman-Turkish hasas, a spoken variant of the literary Arabism ‘ases ‘a guard, night-watchman, policeman’. As to pettomagi/pettomanzi, it is possibly a Turkish adaptation of Greek words as πεϑ αμός ‘death’, πεϑ αμένος ‘dead’ + nominal suffix -cI.

References


Information

Information: Studia Etymologica Cracoviensia, 2011, Volume 16, Issue 1, pp. 129 - 139

Article type: Original article

Titles:

Polish: THE “NEW IMAGE” OF INDO-EUROPEAN AND THE NOSTRATIC HYPOTHESIS: A POSSIBLE RECONCILIATION OF RECONSTRUCTIONS
English: THE “NEW IMAGE” OF INDO-EUROPEAN AND THE NOSTRATIC HYPOTHESIS: A POSSIBLE RECONCILIATION OF RECONSTRUCTIONS

Authors

Millersville University English Department P.O. Box 1002, USA

Published at: 10.12.2011

Article status: Open

Licence: None

Percentage share of authors:

Kenneth Shields Jr. (Author) - 100%

Article corrections:

-

Publication languages:

English