Words under the lens: English word "THATCHED" is
from Turkish "OT ÇATIDI"
The following picture shows a replica of an iron-aged "thatched" roof
in a Butser Ancient Farm,
A replica Ironage thatched roof, Butser Ancient Farm,
(See attachement)
(From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_Age)
The English word THATCHED is
described as being from "thatch: a roof
covering of straw, reeds, palm leaves, or a similar material." [From
The word THATCHED,
rearranged as "T-CHATHDE", (where the Greek letter
H can be an H, I, or E as required for restructuring words of Turkish), is the
restructured and anagrammatized form of the Turkish expression "OT
ÇATIDI" meaning "it
is roof made of grass, leaves, straw, reeds, etc.". This Turkish
definition is the same as the above dictionary definition for the
English word THATCHED .
Turkish word OT means "grass,
plant", ÇATI means "roof" and ÇATIDI
means "it is roof".
This is another example showing how many English language words, like the words
of all other so-called "Indo-European" languages, were made up from
Turkish words and descriptive phrases by way of altering, restructuring and
disguising. Those linguists who search for the truth about the makeup of
languages should take note of this. The Turkish language was the original mathematically
structured mother/father language that was used as a linguistic data base for
most other languages.
Best wishes to all,
Polat Kaya