Thanks for your comments... Look at the following Bantu Words, from my tribe and a few others including Swahili and let me know if they are simply happenstance:
I believe true science is a multidisciplinary in it's approach.... Linguistics is a secret weapon in a scientist's tool-box of unearthing truth but still it should not be taken alone but alongside other disciplines like archaeology, biology, genetics etc.
The above said, even having considered all the disciplines of science, one would still fall short if s/he did not consider the other two facets that are the expression of human existence i.e. art expressed as culture and religion expressed as faith.
Pharaoh Khufu - While conventional archaeology doesn't explain his name, perhaps Linguistics can chip in here. Khufu happens to be the first "true" pharaoh i.e. he was the first to fully declare himself "a man god". Could this be the origins of the swahili word MTUKHUFU?
busu - (Swahili) - to kiss
busu - (Khemet) - to kiss
beberu - (Swahili) - strong man, , was the term used to reffere to the colonialists
bebu - (Khemet) - strong man
bariki - (Swahili) - to bless
bareka - (Khemet) - to bless
paRa - (Khemet) - the Sun
bara - (Gusii) - the sun to shine
paa - (Khemet) - to fly
paa - (Swahilit) - to fly
m'tchar - (Khemet) - to obey
m'cha - (Swahili) - to obey
pesi - (Khemet) - tax
pesa - (Swahili) - money
pequ - (Khemet) - seed
pequ - (Khosa) - seed
mbegu - (Swahili) - seed
muti - (Khemet) - dead person
maiti - (Swahili) - dead person
mpaitu - (Khemet) - not yet
mbado - (Swahili) - not yet
aagarta - (Khemet) - chariot
gari - (Swahili) - car
rua - (Khemet) - drive away, chase away
rua - (Gusii) - go away
mut - (Khemet) - lake, pond
muto - (Swahili) - river
ruti - (Khemet) - to return
rudi - (Swahili) - to return
nesh - (Khemet) - to sprinkle water
nyesha - (Swahilii) - to rain
mvua (Swahili) - rain
Imvula (xhosa) -
embura (Kisii) -
bura (Kikuyu) -
Imvula (Kinyarwanda) -
rema - (Khemet) - lion
rema - (Gusii) - brave
rema - (Khemet) - plot of ground
rema - (Gusii) - land, plough land
hai - (khemet) - naked,
haya - (Swahili) - shame
ua - (Khemet) - kill, destroy, upsde down ankh
ua - (Swahili) - kill, destroy
baka - (Khemet) - empregnate
baka - (Swahili) - rape
rirara - (Khemet) - make joyful noise
Iriria - kisii, ululate (iririata)
heh - (Khemet) - air, breath
hewa - (Swahili) - air, breath
Kuukuu - (Swahili), Kaka - older, elder
abagaka - (Gusi) - (omogaka)
guka(Kikuyu) - grand father
See kaka in egyptian
See more here:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1-6ZpBykuGrACGN5VJsWvpI4H69hrBe07
https://www.um.es/cepoat/egipcio/wp-content/uploads/egyptianhierogly.pdf
The above are Bantu words which I garnered from looking at the Ancient Egyptian Dictionary in the link above by Sir E. A. Willis Budge and comparing it with Swahili, Gusii Tribal Language and a a few other Bantu languages of East Africa e.g. Kikuyu, Kamba, Kinyarwanda, Kuria, Meru etc.
Below are some Hebrew words:
maji - (Swahili) - water
mayim - (Hebrew) - water
shilhi - (Hebrew) - weapon
silaha - (Swahili) - weapon
carmi - (Hebrew) - garden, vineyard
kirimi - (Meru) - farmer, gardener
malak - (Hebrew) - to take the throne and become king r queen
miliki - (Swahli) - take ownership, own
malkia - (Swahili) - queen
serarah - (Hebrew) - to rule
sera - (Swahili) - rulership policies
poa - (Hebrew) - splendid
poa - (Swahili) - splendid
khahm - (Hebrew) - in-law
kamati - (Gusii) - in-law
Food for Thought:
1. Perhaps African's were not savages after all.
2. The out of Africa theory might not be entirely accurate.
3. Bantu classification as coming from Niger Congo might need to be relooked at in favour of a more northerly origin in agreement with tribal accounts of origins from a place called Misri which is synonymous with Egypt.
Post by Peter T. DanielsPost by t***@gmail.comHi, this is may be a very late contribution... even so, I believe I have an interesting observation for you that you will find interesting.
Have you considered that Swahili may have older roots than two and hence be more likely the word donor to both Hebrew and Arabic?
Do you know the history of Swahili? When did it enter East Africa from
the Bantu homeland farther to the west? How could it have encountered
Arabic, let alone Hebrew?
Post by t***@gmail.comI say this because both cultures have significant influence of Ancient Egyptian words which bore great influence to both these cultures.
http://www.kaa-umati.co.uk/
The "cultures" of Kenya may conceivably somehow have been influenced by
Egypt, though how, geographically, that could have been possible is a
major problem for you. Anything "Egyptian" would have been funneled
through Nubian or (if it was later) even Axumite culture.