The
reconstruction of a prehistoric vocabulary, at the same time, reflects
upon the culture that those ancient speakers had. When linguists found
out that there was a common family of languages that included many
European and a few Asian languages, the Indo-European family, they also
theorized that there had been a proto-language from which the modern
Indo-European languages descended. For the past two centuries, they have
worked on the vocabulary of Proto-Indo-European (P.I.E.). Since the
vocabulary of this proto-language is the product of a reconstruction and
does not appear in any written source, its words are preceded by an
asterisk.
P.I.E. had many words related to animal husbandry. One of those words with an asterisk is
*gwou.
The reader would hardly have any trouble to realize that
*gwou
is related to the familiar English word “cow.” Indeed it is.
The P.I.E. word
*gwou
meant “ox, bull, cow” and was inherited by many Indo-European languages. For instance, Sanskrit
go,
Persian
gav,
Proto-Germanic
*kwon,
and even Greek
boûs
and Latin
bōs
(the latter originated the English word “bovine”). It was also the source for the Armenian word
կով
(kov
in Classical/Eastern Armenian;
gov
in Western Armenian). From the Proto-Germanic source came Old English
cu,
Middle English
cu, qu, kowh,
and our current “cow.”
Thus, we understand that, in this case, English and Armenian cows are cousins.
However,
the old Armenian cows had an advantage over their English cousins. They
also produced a word of Indo-European origin together with one of the
sub-products of their milk. The Armenian word
կոգի
(kogi
in Classical/Eastern Armenian;
goki
in
Western Armenian) was used in Classical Armenian with the meaning
“butter.” It derived from the Proto-Indo-European adjective
*gwow-yo,
like its cognates in Sanskrit (gavya,
“coming from or belonging to a cow; milk”) and Avestan (the language of the Persian holy book,
gaoiia,
“coming from cattle, consisting of cattle”).
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