Asses
have had bad publicity since ancient Greek times, and anyone with some
exposure to English colloquial language may hear one of many
combinations of the word “ass” (or the word itself) on a daily basis to
typify clumsiness and stupidity. The same happens with Armenian
speakers, even though there are not that many combinations of the word
էշ
(
esh). However, you may find a wide (someone would also say fine) collection of phrases including
esh
in Armenian. One should add that asses were highly esteemed in ancient Armenia for their usefulness.
Intriguingly, “ass” and
esh
do
not sound that far from each other. The English word is cognate with a
series of Germanic and Slavic languages, and it is likely that all of
them ultimately derive from Latin
asinus
(e.g. Spanish
asno,
Old French
asne
).
Apparently, the form of the Latin word indicates that the ultimate
source was a language of Asia Minor. On the other hand, the Sumerian
language (a non-Indo-European, non-Semitic language spoken in southern
Mesopotamia in the third millennium B.C.) had the word
anshe
(“ass”).
The Armenian word
esh
is native Indo-European. It comes from the Proto-Indo-European word
ek’wo
(“horse”), from which we have, among others, the Latin word
equus
(“horse”; compare English “equestrian,” “equine,” and other horse-related terms). If you are puzzled by the transformation of
k’
into
sh,
we also have Sanskrit
ashva
and Farsi
asp
(both “horse)
,
among others.
Despite their formal closeness and meaning, Armenian
esh
is not the source for Turkish
eshek
(“ass”),
which had its cognates in other Turkic languages of Central Asia.
However, it is not impossible that it could have been the unidentified
language of Asia Minor that became the initial source for Latin
asinus
and, in the end, for English “ass.”
There
is another puzzle to conclude: Armenian esh did not keep the original
meaning of “horse,” for which we have another word of Indo-European
origin,
ձի (tzi).
As Mr. Spock, of “Star Trek” fame, would have said, “fascinating.”
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