User talk:96.232.245.156

ob
As I stated in the summary, Old English and  is from Proto-Indo-European, not , from which modern English  (Old English ) comes from. S URJECTION ·talk·contr·log· 18:02, 20 August 2018 (UTC)


 * : Ancient Greek, Sanskrit , Old Armenian
 * : Ancient Greek, Sanskrit , Latin

Not to mention the formatting issues with your edits, such as the spurious bunch of combining diacritics. S URJECTION ·talk·contr·log· 18:04, 20 August 2018 (UTC)

--96.232.245.156 11:31, 21 August 2018 (UTC) I apologize for the format error. It was an attempt to fix indentation. By the wiki's data you are correct, but I do believe something is extremely incoherent with the etymologies of either 🇨🇬 or 🇨🇬

I run by these postulates,


 * Latin stands equivalent to Old English / "of", Please see Proto-Germanic *ēbanþs for comparison.
 * Latin stands equivalent to Old English  "at"
 * Latin stands equivalent to Old English / "to"
 * Latin stands equivalent to Old English  "off"

For example; English. -dicate "declare" ,ab- "off" or  -duct "lead"  ob-  "in the direction of"

These postulates tend to work, and my mission is to understand why. For these to function justly, there must be something not true about the etymology of "of". The argument I made stands as inductive.


 * If you're going to do something that disagrees with the existing theories of the existing of the Latin and English words and how they relate to each other, I recommend taking the topic to WT:ES before making changes like the ones you made. S URJECTION ·talk·contr·log· 11:52, 21 August 2018 (UTC)