What "slavonic"? Do you think Baltic means Slavic or something?Kompostiturska wrote:True, nor is Finnish. I meant to say Japonic-Uralic or something like that. The first post of this topic messed my thoughts. My bad.Matula wrote: Can you proove that? Japanese isn't even Altaic language.
Did I state otherwise? As it looks to me, you are just rephrasing what I already said. My point was that us Finns are genetically very European, but the Sami and Samoyeds (who I consider the more "rightful bearers" of Uralic languages thanks to their genetics) are not THAT Germanic or Slavic. Genetic studies are going back and forth with the origins of Sami, as some say Asian and some say European.Everyone knows that finns genetically are germanic/slavonic/ugric. In that order. Just because our language isn't germanic or slavonic, it doesn't mean the people aren't.
Perhaps I should have kept my mouth (err, fingers?) shut about genetics, as they are not the point of this topic at all. I just wanted to point out what I think about the origins of Uralic people, as people like Kalevi Wiik want to think it this way:
"Yeah, we are West Germanic and just came up with this sort of language during the ice age. The Samoyeds are just some chinks that adapted our language. And BTW, I base this on absolutely nothing."
The big difference between myself and him is that I do not make an ass out of myself in scientific circles (this forum does NOT count) if I do not have solid proof.
The main point of this topic, however, still remains. Japanese has been suggested to be a relative of so many languages (including English) that I think it is fair to say the Finno-Ugric connection has been dramatically overlooked. To make this post worth of something, have a look at a pretty big list of similar words in Japanese and Hungarian, which does not exactly prove anything, but provides more material to study on. Add this to the structural and phonetic similarities of Japanese and Finnish/Estonian, and we have a pretty clear connection.
I am by no means saying my theory is complete. It is merely a reasonable hypothesis, which I hope to develop into a more scientific form. Steal my life's work and I will beat you to death with a fish.
I think you'v got Wiik's hypothesis *exactly the wrong way around*. He suggests that originally people in "ukrane refugee place" during ice-age spoke some proto-Finnic (Germanics in Balkan's refugee, and Basks in Iberian refugee), and after ice-age spreaded around middle- and eastern Europe. Then later gemanic farmer people spreaded their influence northwards (which was occupied by "Finnics"), and those Finnic tribes changed their language to germanic ones (and at the same time influenced languages so, that it (in part) resulted different languages like German, Flamish etc.).
IMO trying to prove Japanese to be somehow connected to FU languages is really crazy, compaired to Wiik's hypothesis.