Hoar means frost. So when we get the short-form Hor in predynastic egyptian kings we are faced a marker refering to Frost.
Time Table of the Frost Giant Kings
-Hor Suffix Long-form Period
Ny- Nkuku 3200 BC
Hedju- Hkudjku 3175 BC
Iry- Kuarkuku 3150 BC
Nat- Nart 3100 BC
Hor- Prefix Long-form Period
-Aha Arhar 3050 BC
-Us Kus 2900 BC
Name-Hor form flips to Hor-name between 3100 BC - 3050 BC. This suggests a significant change in language development.
Linguistic Popularity shortform
A % E % I % O % U %
2 33% 1 16% 1 16% 0 0% 2 33%
B % C % D % F % G %
0 0% 0 0% 1 16% 0 0% 0 0%
H % J % K % L % M %
2 33% 1 16% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
N % P % Q % R % S %
2 33% 0 0% 0 0% 1 16% 1 16%
T % V % W % X % Y %
1 16% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 2 33%
Z %
0 0%
Popularity of Use Shortform
33% (A, u, h, n, y): Ny-, -Aha
16% (I, d, r, s, t): Nat-, Hedju-, Iry-, -Us
So we see a pattern where the first of their cycle is popular, but those that follow are less popular. Oddly Kuarkuku (the long form of Iry-) has 50% popularity of use compared to all other longforms (Ku being 66%, and Ar being 50%). -Kuar being Crown Prince in suffix form, it exists here in prefix form of Crown Prince Kuku. So who is Crown Prince Kuku? Perhaps a descendant of Ny- (Nkuku).
No comments:
Post a Comment