ioan
Amicus
Posts: 4,162
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Post by ioan on Jan 26, 2011 7:32:12 GMT -5
kleinein : Ancient/modern greek word for "closure". idiot. idiot. idiot. idotic arvanite. Current location in this text. Enter a Perseus citation to go to another section or work. Full search options are on the right side and top of the page. claus¨±ra or cl¨±s¨±ra , ae, f. claudo. * I. (Cf. claustra, I. A.) A lock, bar, bolt, Inscr. Orell. 2510.¡ª II. (Cf. claustra, II. B.) A castle, fort (late Lat.), Cod. Just. 1, 27, 2, ¡ì 4; Cassiod. Var. 2, 5. A Latin Dictionary. Founded on Andrews' edition of Freund's Latin dictionary. revised, enlarged, and in great part rewritten by. Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and. Charles Short, LL.D. Oxford. Clarendon Press. 1879. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text. www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0059:entry=clausura&highlight=clausuraKlisura (Bulgarian: Serbian: §¬§Ý§Ú§ã§å§â§Ñ) is the South Slavic word for "pass", "gorge" or "canyon". It is derived from the Greek kleisoura, which in turn derives from the Latin clausura, a word with meaning close to castle or lock.[1] The term was applied by the Byzantines to fortified mountain districts controlling important passes. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klisura
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Post by Croatian Vanguard on Jan 26, 2011 7:33:49 GMT -5
Babic-as, Dupjan-is,
^^ Root words are actually Turkish just as is a large chunk of modern Balkan vocabulary. I don't see the Serb connection aside from suffixes which are meaningless. Just add any suffix (ski , ic , ov, etc) and you're set.
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ioan
Amicus
Posts: 4,162
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Post by ioan on Jan 26, 2011 7:33:50 GMT -5
First clisura was "classic Serbian toponym" now its ancient greek? When in reality it is NONE. What a pathethic thing!
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Post by Croatian Vanguard on Jan 26, 2011 7:35:24 GMT -5
^^^ your questions are so naive. i had the same questions like 10 years ago. The only typical here is you dude : a typical newbie. It's funny you don't even know who I am. lol. But you keep me in good spirits. Cheers!
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Kralj Vatra
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Warning: Sometimes uses foul language & insults!!!
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Post by Kralj Vatra on Jan 26, 2011 7:41:06 GMT -5
kleinein : Ancient/modern greek word for "closure". idiot. idiot. idiot. idotic arvanite. Current location in this text. Enter a Perseus citation to go to another section or work. Full search options are on the right side and top of the page. claus¨±ra or cl¨±s¨±ra , ae, f. claudo. * I. (Cf. claustra, I. A.) A lock, bar, bolt, Inscr. Orell. 2510.¡ª II. (Cf. claustra, II. B.) A castle, fort (late Lat.), Cod. Just. 1, 27, 2, ¡ì 4; Cassiod. Var. 2, 5. A Latin Dictionary. Founded on Andrews' edition of Freund's Latin dictionary. revised, enlarged, and in great part rewritten by. Charlton T. Lewis, Ph.D. and. Charles Short, LL.D. Oxford. Clarendon Press. 1879. The National Endowment for the Humanities provided support for entering this text. www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0059:entry=clausura&highlight=clausuraKlisura (Bulgarian: Serbian: §¬§Ý§Ú§ã§å§â§Ñ) is the South Slavic word for "pass", "gorge" or "canyon". It is derived from the Greek kleisoura, which in turn derives from the Latin clausura, a word with meaning close to castle or lock.[1] The term was applied by the Byzantines to fortified mountain districts controlling important passes. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klisurasodomized Tatar whore, i now remember that i dind;t find a single toponym like your Clausura in the latin word denoting a canyon. idiot.
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Kralj Vatra
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Warning: Sometimes uses foul language & insults!!!
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Posts: 9,814
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Post by Kralj Vatra on Jan 26, 2011 7:41:58 GMT -5
Babic-as, Dupjan-is, ^^ Root words are actually Turkish just as is a large chunk of modern Balkan vocabulary. I don't see the Serb connection aside from suffixes which are meaningless. Just add any suffix (ski , ic , ov, etc) and you're set. Aha, so Baba Gaga the russian figure is turkish too? Why are you so clueless ? What is your excuse for that?
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ioan
Amicus
Posts: 4,162
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Post by ioan on Jan 26, 2011 7:47:23 GMT -5
sodomized Tatar w**re, i now remember that i dind;t find a single toponym like your Clausura in the latin word denoting a canyon. idiot. serbanized arvanite (conflicting concept but you are the definition of inner conflict and complexes), klisura derives from latin and it is as much serbian as it is bulgarian.
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Post by Croatian Vanguard on Jan 26, 2011 8:10:11 GMT -5
Babic-as, Dupjan-is, ^^ Root words are actually Turkish just as is a large chunk of modern Balkan vocabulary. I don't see the Serb connection aside from suffixes which are meaningless. Just add any suffix (ski , ic , ov, etc) and you're set. Aha, so Baba Gaga the russian figure is turkish too? Why are you so clueless ? What is your excuse for that? Baba is 'Father' in Turkish. Many Bosniaks call their fathers 'Babo' in fact that's what they called Fikret Abdic ( Since someone started talking about Abdic). In 'Turko-slavic' BABIC literally means 'son or grandson of the Father.' Are you starting to get it now? It's not derived from 'grandma' because Slavs didn't carry on their family name from females plus such family name isn't found anywhere before the Ottomans came. Owned PS: Russians don't say 'Baba' like south Slavs do. They say Babushka or Babusha. Obviously I'm talking about 'grandma.'
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Kralj Vatra
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Post by Kralj Vatra on Jan 26, 2011 8:36:25 GMT -5
^^ toolie i aint got more time for you, but suffice to say that most of your arguments can be destroyed with simple one liners, (like this V in serV that you tried to say...)
dudie, been there done that, all your ridiculous questions have been answered years ago....
PS So you owned me, using google xalator? LMAO!!!!
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Kralj Vatra
Amicus
Warning: Sometimes uses foul language & insults!!!
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Posts: 9,814
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Post by Kralj Vatra on Jan 26, 2011 8:37:53 GMT -5
sodomized Tatar w**re, i now remember that i dind;t find a single toponym like your Clausura in the latin word denoting a canyon. idiot. serbanized arvanite (conflicting concept but you are the definition of inner conflict and complexes), klisura derives from latin and it is as much serbian as it is bulgarian. find me a latin canyon named Claus-ura you tatar b1tch...
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Post by Croatian Vanguard on Jan 26, 2011 8:40:20 GMT -5
^^ toolie i aint got more time for you, but suffice to say that most of your arguments can be destroyed with simple one liners, (like this V in serV that you tried to say...) dudie, been there done that, all your ridiculous questions have been answered years ago.... PS So you owned me, using google xalator? LMAO!!!! How do you explain that many Bosniaks call their fathers 'Babo?' How do you explain the surname 'Babic' appeared only after the Ottomans? Yeah , your post definitely sounds like some1 who got pwned. Local residents of Velika Kladusa called him Babo (Daddy) and treated Abdic "like a god" and "were ready to do whatever he said." Fikret Abdic. |
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ioan
Amicus
Posts: 4,162
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Post by ioan on Jan 26, 2011 8:47:24 GMT -5
serbanized arvanite (conflicting concept but you are the definition of inner conflict and complexes), klisura derives from latin and it is as much serbian as it is bulgarian. find me a latin canyon named Claus-ura you tatar b1tch... I dont need to find you anything. Linguists have undoubtedly proven that Klisura is latin derived. End of discussion.
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Kralj Vatra
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Posts: 9,814
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Post by Kralj Vatra on Jan 26, 2011 10:29:46 GMT -5
^^ toolie i aint got more time for you, but suffice to say that most of your arguments can be destroyed with simple one liners, (like this V in serV that you tried to say...) dudie, been there done that, all your ridiculous questions have been answered years ago.... PS So you owned me, using google xalator? LMAO!!!! How do you explain that many Bosniaks call their fathers 'Babo?' How do you explain the surname 'Babic' appeared only after the Ottomans? Yeah , your post definitely sounds like some1 who got pwned. Local residents of Velika Kladusa called him Babo (Daddy) and treated Abdic "like a god" and "were ready to do whatever he said." Fikret Abdic. |
Look man, frankly you dont have a clue. In Greece we say BABA for father, and MAMA for mother, and i bet this is stolen by the french (papa, mama) rather than the mongols. In Epirus, WE SAY BABO or VAVO!! to DENOTE AN OLD LADY...... The old lady who looked after me when i was young in Konjica was named "Babunja". I really dont know about the origin of turkish BABA, since i dont know/dont wanna know Mongolian, but the prefix BAB in many forms is VERY MUCH SLAVIC. PS By putting irrelevant elements in the mix (like this turkish fanfare you pulled out of your ass) is working against your own ownage kid.... PS2 BTW i guess only 5 years old use this word OWNED any more... ;D How old are you Ustasa?
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Post by Croatian Vanguard on Jan 26, 2011 11:04:00 GMT -5
Congratulations , you use a Turkish word to address your dad. Nope, that was a Turkish word introduced to the Balkans. In fact , another common word south Slavs use for 'father' is 'Tata' which is clearly Turkish/Turkic in origin deriving from the word Ata.We are discussing fathers , not grandmothers. Not related. However , büyükanne and babaanne are common Turkish words for Grandma. The first word is easily a form of 'Baka,' another word south Slavs commonly use for 'grandma' including myself. I think the early Slavs picked 'baba' for 'grandma' up from a non-Slavic source. I'll get back to you on that after I do a little browsing around. I don't pretend to be an expert on linguistics like you do. Yeah? And how many slavic words do you know with 'bab' prefix that doesn't sound like its root is non-slavic? Go ahead , do the search. lol. I just pointed out a fact you might have overlooked. Sorry if that doesn't jive well with your own preconceptions. Old enough to call you a fool. Still got that 10 euros?
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ivo
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Post by ivo on Jan 26, 2011 12:36:21 GMT -5
Gyrro, I don’t think you even have a clue as to what you yourself are.
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Post by odel on Jan 26, 2011 14:20:17 GMT -5
Gyrro, I don’t think you even have a clue as to what you yourself are. He does have a clue, he's an ancient Greek Serb/Slav. Unlike the rest of Greece which is filled with Albano-Vlahs he's a pure blooded ancient Greek but at the same time he's also a pure Serb.
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Post by ulf on Jan 26, 2011 15:00:35 GMT -5
"Babo" is used solely by Bosnians to designate father. Proper Serbian word is "otac" or "tata" both proto-slavic of origin
PS. If I would hear anywhere on street someone yelling "babo" I would think off grandma not father
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Patrinos
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Post by Patrinos on Jan 26, 2011 15:52:48 GMT -5
Gyrro, I don’t think you even have a clue as to what you yourself are. He does have a clue, he's an ancient Greek Serb/Slav. Unlike the rest of Greece which is filled with Albano-Vlahs he's a pure blooded ancient Greek but at the same time he's also a pure Serb. lol... Pyrrsko...is Pantelic Greek? because Pantelis is a greek name... or not?
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Post by terroreign on Jan 26, 2011 16:08:39 GMT -5
Pantelic
OH SNAP CRACKLE POP ;D ;D
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Post by terroreign on Jan 26, 2011 16:19:02 GMT -5
Congratulations , you use a Turkish word to address your dad. Nope, that was a Turkish word introduced to the Balkans. In fact , another common word south Slavs use for 'father' is 'Tata' which is clearly Turkish/Turkic in origin deriving from the word Ata.We are discussing fathers , not grandmothers. Not related. However , büyükanne and babaanne are common Turkish words for Grandma. The first word is easily a form of 'Baka,' another word south Slavs commonly use for 'grandma' including myself. I think the early Slavs picked 'baba' for 'grandma' up from a non-Slavic source. I'll get back to you on that after I do a little browsing around. I don't pretend to be an expert on linguistics like you do. Yeah? And how many slavic words do you know with 'bab' prefix that doesn't sound like its root is non-slavic? Go ahead , do the search. lol. I just pointed out a fact you might have overlooked. Sorry if that doesn't jive well with your own preconceptions. Old enough to call you a fool. Still got that 10 euros? Rade, you forget to recognize that the Seljuk Turks borrowed many words as they conquered their way through Anatolia and the Balkans. This is including Persian, Greek, and Slavic. Turkish 'Baba' to refer to 'father', (Azeri Turkish means grandfather/old man) While Belarusian it is "Backa", Ukrainian "Batko", both of these languages use the colloquial "Tata". And "Tata" in Serbian is the colloquial form of "Otac", which is inarguably Slavic. Oh and btw there are people who received last names through the mother, for example "Poleksic" in Montenegro..."Poleksija/Poleksa" a common traditional female name.
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