I
iseidon
Guest
int-international, ag-ancient greek, la-latina, ru-russian, en-english, de-deutsch, fr-françoise, es-español.
About enFOREST and ruLES (ruЛЕС). In such cases, one must always dig for inter-letter consonantal transitions (intEVA-ruEBA-ruЕБА, esXAVI-esXABI, agPYR-enFIRE). You can often even ignore vowels, because vowels (and therefore their omissions) were present not only among the Arabs and Slavs.
I don't know if it's on purpose or not, but you gave words that came from the common Greek ϝλατι̯ος. Given that the "R" in English is rarely pronounced as ours, and more often it is not pronounced, and that the "L" sound often turns into an "R", it is hard not to see the similarity to the Greek source, which may have migrated as the modern word FOREST (instead of FLATIOS-FRATIOS-FRTS). In Russian, however, the word came from the form ϝλατι̯ος-ulatios (vlatios, hence felling wood валить лес)-ulasios-lasios-lesios-les). This is one version, which is based on an analysis of the etymology of the deWALD (WALT-ВАЛТ-ruВАЛИТЬ; enFELL,enFALL,deFÄLLEN,frFOULE).
The second version (again, mine, since more often than not, I like to look up the etymology myself, rather than stupidly reading a dictionary and retranslating its version) is related to the word ruBOR-ruБОР. The "B" sound very often translates into "V" and vice versa (examples were above, but here are also Babylon-Vavilon, Benjamin-Veniamin, Bartholomew-Varfolomey, war-slaughter). The "V" sound often turns into "F", especially in Germanic languages, where the "F" sound has the letter "V". In Old English there is the word BEARU (FOREST). B(EA)RU-BORU-VORU-FORU. ST is a typical ending of the English words DUST, COAST, BUST, WEST, EAST, LOST, LAST, PAST, CAST, etc., which can also stand for adjective. Bottom line. FORUST-FOREST (settled in frFORE-frFORET).
Here are two versions. Both point to a common origin of Slavic, Germanic and Latin languages.
laSILVA (Transylvania, Pennsylvania) is a twist on agULASIOS-VLASIOS, it just needs to drop the ending (like intGELIOS-ruГЕЛИОС-ruGELIY-ruГЕЛИЙ).
By the way, in the Russian language there is a word ruVOLOS-ruВОЛОС-enHAIR-enLOCKS, which has a common base with agVLASIOS and ruLES. Given that the meaning of the words ruVOLOSY and ruLES is similar. ruVOLOS-enHAIR is a sprout (like the tree in the ruLES-enFOREST; note the possible P-F transition in the word enSPROUT-SFROUT-SFRT) and it is also ruВАЛИТСЯ-enFALLSDOWN. And together they form a ruVOLOSY-ruВОЛОСЫ-enHAIR-enLOCKS-ruLES-enFOREST.
esBOSKE-esBOSQUE easily turns into ruVOSK-ruВОСК (enWAX-ruВАКС-deWACHS; X-KS-SK; X-CHS-SCH), with which all vegetation is covered in thin layers. We add enBUSH or frBUISSON. enWAX-ruВОСК in Latin is laCERA, which adds to us the laSILVA-intSILVER-ruSERY-ruСЕРЫЙ-laCERA-ruSEREBRO-ruСЕРЕБРО connection. CERA in Latin sounds like CHERA (enCHERRIES-enЧЕРРИЕС-ruЧЕРЕШНЯ-ruCHERSHNYA, enCHERRY-enЧЕРРИ-ruВИШНЯ-ruVISHNYA-deKIRSCHE(K-CH-С-S); ruVOSK-ruВОСК-enWAX-deWACHS), which again refers to the forest, in Spanish like FERA, which refers to FOREST.
Humans. Unite.
Люди. Объединяейтесь.
About enFOREST and ruLES (ruЛЕС). In such cases, one must always dig for inter-letter consonantal transitions (intEVA-ruEBA-ruЕБА, esXAVI-esXABI, agPYR-enFIRE). You can often even ignore vowels, because vowels (and therefore their omissions) were present not only among the Arabs and Slavs.
I don't know if it's on purpose or not, but you gave words that came from the common Greek ϝλατι̯ος. Given that the "R" in English is rarely pronounced as ours, and more often it is not pronounced, and that the "L" sound often turns into an "R", it is hard not to see the similarity to the Greek source, which may have migrated as the modern word FOREST (instead of FLATIOS-FRATIOS-FRTS). In Russian, however, the word came from the form ϝλατι̯ος-ulatios (vlatios, hence felling wood валить лес)-ulasios-lasios-lesios-les). This is one version, which is based on an analysis of the etymology of the deWALD (WALT-ВАЛТ-ruВАЛИТЬ; enFELL,enFALL,deFÄLLEN,frFOULE).
The second version (again, mine, since more often than not, I like to look up the etymology myself, rather than stupidly reading a dictionary and retranslating its version) is related to the word ruBOR-ruБОР. The "B" sound very often translates into "V" and vice versa (examples were above, but here are also Babylon-Vavilon, Benjamin-Veniamin, Bartholomew-Varfolomey, war-slaughter). The "V" sound often turns into "F", especially in Germanic languages, where the "F" sound has the letter "V". In Old English there is the word BEARU (FOREST). B(EA)RU-BORU-VORU-FORU. ST is a typical ending of the English words DUST, COAST, BUST, WEST, EAST, LOST, LAST, PAST, CAST, etc., which can also stand for adjective. Bottom line. FORUST-FOREST (settled in frFORE-frFORET).
Here are two versions. Both point to a common origin of Slavic, Germanic and Latin languages.
laSILVA (Transylvania, Pennsylvania) is a twist on agULASIOS-VLASIOS, it just needs to drop the ending (like intGELIOS-ruГЕЛИОС-ruGELIY-ruГЕЛИЙ).
By the way, in the Russian language there is a word ruVOLOS-ruВОЛОС-enHAIR-enLOCKS, which has a common base with agVLASIOS and ruLES. Given that the meaning of the words ruVOLOSY and ruLES is similar. ruVOLOS-enHAIR is a sprout (like the tree in the ruLES-enFOREST; note the possible P-F transition in the word enSPROUT-SFROUT-SFRT) and it is also ruВАЛИТСЯ-enFALLSDOWN. And together they form a ruVOLOSY-ruВОЛОСЫ-enHAIR-enLOCKS-ruLES-enFOREST.
esBOSKE-esBOSQUE easily turns into ruVOSK-ruВОСК (enWAX-ruВАКС-deWACHS; X-KS-SK; X-CHS-SCH), with which all vegetation is covered in thin layers. We add enBUSH or frBUISSON. enWAX-ruВОСК in Latin is laCERA, which adds to us the laSILVA-intSILVER-ruSERY-ruСЕРЫЙ-laCERA-ruSEREBRO-ruСЕРЕБРО connection. CERA in Latin sounds like CHERA (enCHERRIES-enЧЕРРИЕС-ruЧЕРЕШНЯ-ruCHERSHNYA, enCHERRY-enЧЕРРИ-ruВИШНЯ-ruVISHNYA-deKIRSCHE(K-CH-С-S); ruVOSK-ruВОСК-enWAX-deWACHS), which again refers to the forest, in Spanish like FERA, which refers to FOREST.
Humans. Unite.
Люди. Объединяейтесь.