Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Cure Nasty Nail Fungus in a Few Minutes



Toenail Fungus Discovery Is Leaving Doctors Speechless (Try This Tonight)

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Borrowings or false cognates can skew or obscure the correct data.[29] For example, English taboo ([tæbu]) is like the six Polynesian forms because of borrowing from Tongan into English, not because of a genetic similarity.[30] That problem can usually be overcome by using basic vocabulary, such as kinship terms, numbers, body parts and pronouns.[31] Nonetheless, even basic vocabulary can be sometimes borrowed. Finnish, for example, borrowed the word for "mother", äiti, from Proto-Germanic *aiþį̄ (compare to Gothic aiþei).[32] English borrowed the pronouns "they", "them", and "their(s)" from Norse.[33] Thai and various other East Asian languages borrowed their numbers from Chinese. An extreme case is represented by Pirahã, a Muran language of South America, which has been controversially[34] claimed to have borrowed all of its pronouns from Nheengatu.[35][36] Step 2, establish correspondence sets The next step involves determining the regular sound-correspondences exhibited by the lists of potential cognates. For example, in the Polynesian data above, it is apparent that words that contain t in most of the languages listed have cognates in Hawaiian with k in the same position. That is visible in multiple cognate sets: the words glossed as 'one', 'three', 'man' and 'taboo' all show the relationship. The situation is called a "regular correspondence" between k in Hawaiian and t in the other Polynesian languages. Similarly, a regular correspondence can be seen between Hawaiian and Rapanui h, Tongan and Samoan f, Maori ɸ, and Rarotongan ʔ. Mere phonetic similarity, as between English day and Latin dies (both with the same meaning), has no probative value.[37] English initial d- does not regularly match Latin d-[38] since a large set of English and Latin non-borrowed cognates cannot be assembled such that English d repeatedly and consistently corresponds to Latin d at the beginning of a word, and whatever sporadic matches can be observed are due either to chance (as in the above example) or to borro
















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