Much has
been written and debated about Atlantean Linguistics, successive
scholars and researchers supplying impressive catalogues of
similarities between languages both sides of the Atlantic and
world-wide that they believe indicate a single point of origin.
The following comparisons were noted by Donnelly:
| ENGLISH |
CHINESE |
CHALDEE |
| To
shine |
Mut
|
Mul |
| To
die |
Mut |
Mit |
| Book |
King |
Kin |
| Cloth |
Sik |
Sik |
| Right
hand |
Dzek |
Zag |
| Hero |
Tan |
Dun |
| Earth |
Kien-kai
|
Kiengi |
| Cow |
Lub |
Lu,
lup |
| Brick |
Ku |
Ku |
Here is
another, more up-to-date variation, from information supplied
by Charles Berlitz:
| ENGLISH |
AMERINDIAN |
EURO-ASIAN-AFRICAN |
| King |
Aimara:
malku |
Arabic:
melek; Hebrew: melekh |
| Priest |
Maya:
balaam |
Hebrew:
bileam (magician) |
| Home |
Guarani:
oko |
Greek:
oika |
| Butterfly |
Nahuatl:
popalo-tl |
Latin:
papilio |
| Cloud |
Nahautl:
mixtli |
Greek:
omichtli |
| To
blow |
Klamath:
pniw |
Greek:
pneu |
| High
mountain |
Quechua:
andi |
Ancient
Egyptian: andi |
| Heron |
Quechua:
llake llake |
Sumerian:
lak lak |
| Lie |
Quechua:
llu llu |
Sumerian:
lul |
| Sun |
Araucanian:
anta |
Ancient
Egyptian: anta |
| Ax |
Araucanian:
bal |
Sumerian:
bal |
From Atlantis Myth or Reality by Murry Hope