Sujet : Re: Lama and Yama De : kehoea (at) *nospam* parhasard.net (Aidan Kehoe) Groupes :sci.lang Date : 14. Sep 2024, 06:51:19 Autres entêtes Message-ID :<87wmjehjfs.fsf@parhasard.net> References :1 User-Agent : Gnus/5.101 (Gnus v5.10.10) XEmacs/21.5-b35 (Linux-aarch64)
Ar an triú lá déag de mí Méan Fómhair, scríobh Jeff Barnett:
> Question from a non-linguist: > > My pleasure reading of Oriental fiction and myth seem to frequently run into > the words "Lama" and "Yama". The first usually refers to a holy man and the > second to a God. Of course the words sound fairly similar to my ear. So I am > curious: Are they were derived from a common origin?
Wikipedia documents the first as Tibetan, with “guru” being the appropriate Sanskrit term, the second is itself Sanskrit. Tibetan is a Sino-Tibetan language, Sanskrit is Indo-European. With them coming from distinct language families, absent other evidence the way to bet is that they are not derived from a common origin.
> I briefly poked around the internet and found nothing that was based on > anything other than it sounded cute to say "Lama Yama" or "Yama Lama" three > times quickly. Since I really don't know how to find the right hole to force a > search engine into, I thought I'd try you all.
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