This is a good article of info. Didn't know the basque language was unrelated.
Eric Van Lustbader wrote a bood where the hero was imprisoned for years with someone who knew basque and taught it to him.
Bilbo Baggins, b/c of this article, has a new meaning as well, so thanks.
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History of the Basque LanguageThe area where Proto-Indo-European was originally spoken (the Proto-Indo-European "homeland") is still a matter of dispute, but various hints point to Eastern Europe, north and north-east of the Black Sea, and it seems to be rather clear that Indo-European languages are relatively late intruders in Western Europe. Concerning the time when Proto-Indo-European must have been in use, one may think of the end of the stone age in Europe... Obviously, Basque is not an Indo-European language, as it can easily be seen if one compares the basic lexicon and grammar (morphology and syntax) of Basque with the basic lexicon and grammar of Indo-European languages. If one looks at the vocabulary of Basque, one finds the most fundamental words of the language strikingly different from those found in Indo-European languages, whereas a great number of other (less basic) words are loans from Latin or from Romance languages... Whereas the vocabulary of modern Basque is a mixture of genuine ("old") Basque words and Indo-European (mainly Latin and Romance) loans, the grammatical elements (morphemes) of Basque are generally unrelated to Indo-European ones, so they constitute the non-Indo-European frame of the language. The inflexion of Basque nouns and verbs is totally different from that of Indo-European languages... In my opinion, the only rewarding field of study that will be left here after the treating of the mentioned fields of research is the problem of an assumable historical relation between Basque and North Caucasian, South Caucasian, or both. Are there remote connexions between Basque and the Caucasus?
by Manfred Owstrowski
oh, and I think St. Ignatius of Loyola (founder of the Jesuits/Society of Jesus) was Basque
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