On Monday, July 25, 2022 at 3:00:43 PM UTC-4, I Envy JTEM wrote:
So these cavemen, right, they found some rocks no I
mean coal. They found some coal. And they used it,
this coal they found, to line their fire pit then they
burnt stuff. I dunno, maybe trees or at least sticks but
not skunks, cus why would anyone burn a skunk?
That's stupid. Stop, okay? Don't be stupid. Be smart
like me.
Anyhow, they burnt sticks but not any skunks and the
coal, see, the coal they had lining their fire pits caught
on fire cus, you know, FIRE! Coal burns and stuff. So
this coal, alright, this coal burn and GWOBULL WARBLING!
There's this CO2 and coal is a fossil fuel so CLIMATE!
Everything got warm and that caused CLIMATE CHANGE
and all the dinosaurs died and Australia became an
Island then people left Africa and here we are.
Oo! The savanna! They evolved there. And the savanna
was pretty dry so they weren't drowned by rising sea levels
but everyone else was and they ran after buffalo or lions
and stuff so UPRIGHT WALKING! Then they burned coal
and look what happened. Plus Domeshields.
Where's my Nobel Prize?
-- --
https://jtem.tumblr.com/post/172044097773
GIGO.
___
-dom- (dim? ~ dark, dome) tumuli wombelle endumongolu mengelap mela
quora
Other answers have given you the derivation of English -dom as far back as Proto-Germanic, and Russian dom as being related to Latin domus, but really, you need to go all the way back to Proto–Indo-European to confirm that they’re unrelated.
Russian dom and Latin domus, per
Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/dṓm - Wiktionary
Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary Jump to navigation Jump to search Proto-Indo-European [ edit ] Etymology [ edit ] From *dem- ( “ to build ” ) . *dṓm f [1] home house Declension [ edit ] Athematic, acrostatic singular nominative *dṓ
m genitive *déms singular dual plural nominative *dṓm *dómh₁(e) *dómes vocative *dóm *dómh₁(e) *dómes accusative *dṓm *dómh₁(e) *dómm̥s genitive *déms *? *démoHom ablative *déms *? *démmos dative *démey *? *démmos locative *dém ,
*démi *? *démsu instrumental *démh₁ *? *démbʰi Derived terms [ edit ] *déms pótis *dom-u-s ( with thematisation ) Proto-Balto-Slavic: *damús ( see there for further descendants ) *dom-o-s ( with thematisation ) Proto-Hellenic: *dómos Ancient
Greek: δόμος ( dómos ) Proto-Indo-Iranian: *dámas Proto-Italic: *domos Latin: domus ( see there for further descendants ) *d�m-o-s ( vṛddhi-derivative ) Proto-Celtic: *dāmos Proto-Brythonic: *d�β̃ ( see there for further descendants ) ⇒
Proto-Celtic: *dāmā Old Irish: dám ( see there for further descendants ) Descendants [ edit ] Armenian: Old Armenian: տուն ( tun ) , ⇒ տանուտէր ( tanutēr ) ( see there for further descendants ) Proto-Hellenic: *dṓn Proto-Indo-Iranian:
*dám Proto-Indo-Aryan: *dám Proto-Iranian: *dám Avestan: 𐬛𐬄𐬨 ( dąm ) ⇒ Northern Kurdish: bindav ( “ basement ” ) ( derived from bin ground, foundation + dav ) References [ edit ] ^ Ringe, Donald (2006) From Proto-Indo-European to
Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English; 1) [1] , Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/d%E1%B9%93m go back to PIE *dṓm, which relates to the verb *dem- “to build”. So a dṓm is literally a building. The related Ancient Greek word is δόμος domos “household, dwelling, barn”. The Ancient Greek δῶμα d�ma “hall” is ultimately
derived from domos (it’s a restatement of “building”), and that’s the word that has survived (in the vernacular, as ðoma “rooftop”, and revived through learned Greek, as the diminutive ðomatio “room”.)
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/d�maz - Wiktionary
Proto-Germanic [ edit ] Etymology [ edit ] From Proto-Indo-European *dʰóh₁mos ( “ thing put ” ) , from *dʰeh₁- ( “ to put, do ” ) . Related to *d�ną . Pronunciation [ edit ] *d�maz m judgement Inflection [ edit ] masculine a-stem
Declension of *d�maz (masculine a-stem) singular plural nominative *d�maz *d�m�z, *d�m�s vocative *d�m *d�m�z, *d�m�s accusative *d�mą *d�manz genitive *d�mas, *d�mis *d�mǫ̂ dative *d�mai *d�mamaz instrumental *d�m� *d�mamiz
Derived terms [ edit ] Descendants [ edit ] Proto-West Germanic: *d�m Old Norse: dómr Gothic: 𐌳�𐌼� ( d�ms ) → ? Proto-Slavic: *duma ( see there for further descendants )
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/d%C5%8Dmaz Germanic *d�maz “judgement, doom”, which is where -dom comes from, derives from Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/dʰóh₁mos: something that has been placed, that has been put. The Germanic usage is metaphorical: a judgement is spoken of as
something that has been set in place. In Ancient Greek, the same stem shows up as θωμός tʰ�mos, “a heap”: it’s literally a bunch of stuff that has been set in place.
dʰóh₁mos itself doesn’t have any other immediately related words, but its underlying verb, Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/dʰeh₁- - Wiktionary “to put, to place, to do”, has plenty. In Russian, they include delo “deed, work” and det’
“to do”. In Greek, ti-thēmi “to put”, and themelios “foundation”; in Latin, facio “to do” (Proto-Italic *θakj�), and familia “household, family”; the missing link between “foundation” and “household” is Sanskrit dhāman: �
�order; dwelling-place, temple; family”.
Notice that Russian dom is related to a Greek word starting with d, domos, but Germanic doom is related to a Greek word starting with th, tʰ�mos, and a Sanskrit word starting with dh, dhāman. The distinction between Proto–Indo-European *d and *dʰ
isn’t cosmetic: it’s there to capture the fact that this is a sound which in most European languages shows up as d, but in Greek shows up as th and in Sanskrit as dh. And that makes it distinct from the sound which, in most Indo-European languages
including Greek and Sanskrit, shows up as d.
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