From 1be510f9529cb082f802408b472a77d074b394c0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Nicolas Vigier Date: Sun, 14 Apr 2013 13:46:12 +0000 Subject: Add zarb MLs html archives --- .../20100922/b2ca497c/attachment-0001.html | 51 ++++++++++++++++++++++ .../attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment.html | 51 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 102 insertions(+) create mode 100644 zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment-0001.html create mode 100644 zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment.html (limited to 'zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c') diff --git a/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment-0001.html b/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment-0001.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2b7303ad1 --- /dev/null +++ b/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment-0001.html @@ -0,0 +1,51 @@ + + + + + + +Le 21/09/2010 20:28, Wolfgang Bornath a écrit : +
+
2010/9/21 Maurice Batey <maurice@bcs.org.uk>:
+  
+
+
Why does the
+
+   http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3095he
+
+pronunciation differ from others in here?!
+    
+
+
 Maybe because it is run by a USA based christian organisation who
+focus on the bible while most people here who gave their prononciation
+are native Greek speakers ?
+
+Because this thread is entitled "what is the origin of the word +mageia", I just add the following little piece of information. I had +dinner yesterday in a very pleasant japanese restaurant in Paris, and, +well, one of the participants was an erudite scholar, specialized in +ancient greek. I asked him about "mageia". He said it was a very +interesting term, the origin of which is still much debated. It is +generally thought to be linked to some proper names, like Machaon, a +warrior   on the side of the greeks in the Trojan War. Most +interestingly Machaon was a valued surgeon and medic.
+My friend said that the root *"mak-"*  (considered by philologists to +be linked to both "Machaon" and "mageia") was considered to be a +derivative of a Persian word, meaning something like : *vault*, +*protective vault* and in a more abstact derived meaning : *protective +knowledge* (hence the link with Machaon a character  mastering such +protective knowledge as medecine and surgery and the drift toward the +"magic" meaning).
+The debate about the word is not about what I just summarized, he +said,  but rather is this : "are proper names like Machaon, for +chararcters linked to protective knowledge, the origin of the term +which then drifted to a common name like "mageia", or, conversely was +the common name mageia the primary term which then drifted to secondary +proper names such as Machaon?"
+Some notion of 'protective knowledge' for the proper name of a  Linux +project is perhaps not so bad, don't you think so ?
+
+ + diff --git a/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment.html b/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2b7303ad1 --- /dev/null +++ b/zarb-ml/mageia-discuss/attachments/20100922/b2ca497c/attachment.html @@ -0,0 +1,51 @@ + + + + + + +Le 21/09/2010 20:28, Wolfgang Bornath a écrit : +
+
2010/9/21 Maurice Batey <maurice@bcs.org.uk>:
+  
+
+
Why does the
+
+   http://www.searchgodsword.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=3095he
+
+pronunciation differ from others in here?!
+    
+
+
 Maybe because it is run by a USA based christian organisation who
+focus on the bible while most people here who gave their prononciation
+are native Greek speakers ?
+
+Because this thread is entitled "what is the origin of the word +mageia", I just add the following little piece of information. I had +dinner yesterday in a very pleasant japanese restaurant in Paris, and, +well, one of the participants was an erudite scholar, specialized in +ancient greek. I asked him about "mageia". He said it was a very +interesting term, the origin of which is still much debated. It is +generally thought to be linked to some proper names, like Machaon, a +warrior   on the side of the greeks in the Trojan War. Most +interestingly Machaon was a valued surgeon and medic.
+My friend said that the root *"mak-"*  (considered by philologists to +be linked to both "Machaon" and "mageia") was considered to be a +derivative of a Persian word, meaning something like : *vault*, +*protective vault* and in a more abstact derived meaning : *protective +knowledge* (hence the link with Machaon a character  mastering such +protective knowledge as medecine and surgery and the drift toward the +"magic" meaning).
+The debate about the word is not about what I just summarized, he +said,  but rather is this : "are proper names like Machaon, for +chararcters linked to protective knowledge, the origin of the term +which then drifted to a common name like "mageia", or, conversely was +the common name mageia the primary term which then drifted to secondary +proper names such as Machaon?"
+Some notion of 'protective knowledge' for the proper name of a  Linux +project is perhaps not so bad, don't you think so ?
+
+ + -- cgit v1.2.1