Elohim, Jahweh, seraphim, cherubim, Olam etc

Dec 11, 2024 06:43

Элохим уничтожили некоторые города на Земле. Об этом говорится в Библии, в частности в Genesis 19:29-31. Они же спустились, и смешали наши языки так, чтобы мы не понимали друг друга.

По мнению некоторых, эти существа тысячелетиями вторгались в жизнь людей и с помощью своих технологий завоевали большую часть Земли. Они генетически изменили многие виды, в том числе людей, и считают человечество своими «мясными животными».

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The Biblic 'ELOHIM' vs. Estonian ELAJA, ELUKA:

According to Genesis 19:29-31, the 'Elohim' have destroyed some cities on Earth. It is also the 'Elohim' that mixed (or created) our languages.

Some consider that the plural 'Elohim' are the 'beings', the 'creatures' that have been invading human life for thousands of years and have conquered much of the Earth with their technology. They have genetically altered many species, including humans, and consider humanity to be their "meat animals."

Mauro Biglino and Paul Wallis mention that the name Eloh (in singuar) is a borrowing into Hebrew from some previous language, and it is useless to search for its etymology in Hebrew: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qo7e2Rh6WpM

Together with Cinzia Mele https://www.facebook.com/cinzia.mele.39/ , Mauro was exploring the Biblic origins in the North, at the Baltic coasts. Having said A, one has to say B. Latin, Greek, Hebrew which Mauro studied are of little help to understand the meaning of the names in the Bible, as well as names in the Roman and Greek mythology. One has to open the dictionaries of the Finnic languages, in order to get the clues.

'Elohim' were the creatures that are not viewed positively (they destroyed our cities, they mixed our languages 'so that we do not understand each other', etc). Thus, their name very likely derives from the Estonian eluka, elukas / elaja, elajas, used in a negative way referring to 'an animal, a beast, a creature, a monster' (e.g., hirmuäratav elukas - a scary beast, a scary monster; raudne elukas - an iron monster; mereelukas - a sea animal, a sea monster; metsaelukas - a wild beast, a forest creature).

The basic stem word is Estonian ela-, elama, Finnish elää, Karelian eliä, Lappish eallit, Mari ilaš, Hungarina élni - to live, to exist; Estonian elu - life, existence.

Words and names (like Olam, Jahweh, seraphim, cherubim) are all borrowed into Hebrew from the Finnic languages. If anyone is interested, I will provide more details on each of these and many others.

nostratic languages hypothesis is alive, english etymology beyond indo-europeism, parole italiane - etimologia estesa, paleocontact hypotheis, history

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