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| UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE (Contacts)            Edo Nyland (2001) has proposed the existence of a
  Universal Language in a book Linguistic
  Archaeology:  An Introduction.  Trafford Publ.  541 p.  In this book
  Nyland revealed the recovery of stone-age and medieval history by analysis of
  language.  In the process of gathering
  data he became convinced that a universal language had existed in the
  Neolithic and that virtually all advanced languages of today derived directly
  from this early language.  This has
  led to the development of several hypotheses and a theory of the origin of
  languages (see Theory).          Analyzing the place names of the
  Odyssey, Nyland made the interesting discovery that names and words may be
  interpreted as a shorthand, having been agglutinated from core words of the
  Basque language. He identified a subset of the Basque language, the core
  words of which have come through since 3,000 B.C. in almost unchanged form,
  as the nearest equivalent of the Neolithic universal language that has been
  spoken in Europe and the Near East before speech became confused in Babylon.           Applying his new decoding method to
  names and words from many other language families, he arrived at the
  startling conclusion that words of ancient languages like Sanskrit and
  Sumerian as well as of modern European languages like English, Spanish or
  German, can be decoded by the same method into Basque sentences revealing
  hidden meaning. This discovery supports the hypothesis of monogenesis of
  languages, according to Genesis 11.1: "...now the whole earth had one language..."           As ancient words and names have come
  with meanings attached to them which cannot be substantiated by the hidden
  meaning decoded from them, a great deal of falsified or censored history can
  be recovered, revealing that many languages have been invented from the
  universal language, according to Genesis 11.7: "...come, let us go down and there confuse their
  language, that they may not understand one another's speech."
   Bibliography |