There is a connection between Adonis and Semitic Adon, but as for your other 
etymologies, I highly doubt them. Zeus is actually an early form of Greek 
theos, and a parallel with Latin deus. As far as I know, these are 
Indo-European words, not Semitic words. The other forms you give are 
questionable, but I'm willing to be persuaded by evidence, not just assertion.


GEORGE ATHAS
Dean of Research,
Moore Theological College (moore.edu.au)
Sydney, Australia


From: Isaac Fried <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wednesday, 17 October 2012 11:39 AM
To: George Athas <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: B-Hebrew <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: [b-hebrew] XA$MAL - electricity

You may well be right, yet I would not discount the possibility that 'electron' 
is of
Phoenician origin, as I don't discount the possibility that the Greek Cadamus is
'the man of קדם QEDEM, the east', making 'academia' the place of study of the
arts, such as writing, of the east.

The Greeks imported their cult of the many goods from the east, and the names
of their deities may still harbor a discernible hint as to their distant origin.
Isn't Apollo but the eastern בעל BAAL, or אב-הוא-אל-הוא AB-HU-EL-HU?
Isn't Athena but our דינה DIYNAH, or אדינה ADINAH, 'the mistress'? Isn't
Pallas just בעלת BAALAT? And isn't Zeus but עז-הוא-עז AZ-HU-AZ, corresponding
to the biblical עזאזל AZAZ-EL of Lev. 16:8; or possibly עז-הוא-איש AZ-HU-I$ 
similar
to our אל שדי EL $ADAY = I$-AD-HI-HI of Gen. 17:1?

Isaac Fried, Boston University

_______________________________________________
b-hebrew mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/b-hebrew

Reply via email to