How Can We Help?
< Back

Alfredo Trombetti (16 January 1866, in Bologna – 5 July 1929, in Venice), was an Italian linguist active in the early 20th century.

Career overview

Trombetti was a professor at the University of Bologna. He was a member of the Italian Academy.

He is best known as an advocate of the doctrine of monogenesis, according to which all of the world's languages go back to a single common ancestral language. His arguments for monogenesis were first presented in his book L'unità d'origine del linguaggio, published in 1905.[1] This doctrine is still extremely controversial.

Proposed etymologies

A selection of Trombetti's proposed global etymologies:[1]

Meaning Root
to hear; ear kul (kur)
water ma; wad (wad, wed, wod), ud
dog ku (ku-ari, ku-ri, etc.)
hair tuk, suk
behind, back kata, taka
foot ganga; pat
earth (clay, ash) tu
dust twar, tur (< tu 'earth')
woman na (nai)
man (person) ku, etc.
man (male) mar
egg (testicle) umu (mu-n, mu-r, etc.)

Selected works

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Trombetti, Alfredo. 1905. L'unità d'origine del linguaggio. Bologna: Luigi Beltrami.

External links

Categories
Table of Contents