Indo-European

Is their any indo-european word that every european language use today?

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Could only find this

seriously why is the Germanic branch so weird

it's not
you're just not very used to languages probably

Grimm's Law

>sanskrit
pretty cool

Ten
Mama

'I'
German autism

The eternal teuton's innate retardation.

this counts

>persian
>kurdish
>same
Who does turks say "iki" for two?

Aryan

>implying turkspeak was influenced by any human languages
>implying turks are human

I know that the turkish word for water is from chinese "su", "tzu".
>buttblasted diaspora
Wonder what the word for lube is?

Pretty much all kinship ties are amazingly similar in all indo-european languages. And milk.

oy tsvey

but it is
the germanic branch is very different from the rest of the family

not really

thats pretty understandable
a lot of stops get turned into fricatives, see the changes between modern and ancient greek

I'm not sure but I think that the word for mother and night, more basic and primordial words, are common in a lot of Indo-European languages.

Grammatically it is but phonologically it's not all that weird.

>Grammatically
How?

Yoke.

zompist.com/euro.htm

Strangely none of the branches agree in their rendering of numbers 11-19.

Yep. The vowel shift is nuts too.

Turkish is not an Indo-European language.

Turkish is more akin to Mongolian and Finnish then any Indo-European language

>anglo doesn't get it. someone else is retarded.

Collision of Centum/Satem indo europeans speakers and outside influence from non indo european people

Ma
Pa