Talk:ゼット

doublet: One of two (or more) words in a language that have the same etymology, but have come to the modern language through different routes.
 * From Middle English zed, zedde, zede, from Old French zede, from Late Latin zeta, from Ancient Greek ζῆτα (zêta).
 * From the Ancient Greek ζῆτα (zêta).
 * host and guest, the former through Latin (particularly French) and the latter through Germanic (particularly Old Norse), both from Proto-Indo-European. Saying zed is "Latin-derived" and zeta is "Greek-derived" is pure nonsense, because they both comes ultimately from the Greek word, and the Latin word was borrowed from Greek.

ばかFumiko￥talk 08:49, 30 April 2019 (UTC)
 * I honestly think that's irrelevant here, but it is valid, so I've kept it.
 * I've reverted your other content removals from and .  ‑‑ Eiríkr Útlendi │Tala við mig 19:06, 1 May 2019 (UTC)