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What's that Dutch word you told me for where you belong and you're rooted?
Looks nice. Are the windows huge or is that a small kitchen?
That might be it - it means something more than just Home, but your proper place, where you belong, if not own - it owns you back. You said we kept talking about the concept showing you our home and our native land where some of our roots here go back 500 years, rather un-American of us.
Not...entirely sure what you're asking here?heart comes from *ḱḗr (long e; lengthened owing to the loss of -d in the nominative form, still present in the genitive form: *ḱr̥dés). This word is reflected in, e.g. Latin cor (gen. cordis). Grimm's law notes k -> x in the shift from PIE to PGmc, so the PGmc form is *ḱḗr(d) -> *hertô (d -> t is another part of Grimm's Law)hearth comes from the PIE root *ker- (not the same as a noun; note also a straight velar /k/ rather than the palato-velar /ḱ/) which means "to burn", giving us the aforementioned hearth (via OE heorþ), but also: Goth haúri ("coal"), ON hyrr ("fire"), and via the ablaut PIE *kr-em- -> Lat. cremo ('burn')Another word that sounds similar: hart (the original word for a male deer; reflected in German Hirsch, Dutch hert) which comes originally from PIE *ḱóru ("horn"), which went, again k -> in Germanic (PGmc. is *herutaz), and this PIE term also gives us Lat. cornu ("horn")Similar sounding, yes, but not at all related.To the second part of the post (the possibly-German word that means home and is related to hearth) - the German word for hearth is der Herd, although the reference to a hearth is archaic now. Other descendants of PGmc herþaz ("hearth") are Luxembourgish Häerd, Frisian Herde, Heet, and hurd, Low German Heerd.There's also the word home, coming from PIE *ḱóymos ("village, home") -> PGmc *haimaz ("home") reflected in a butt-ton of assorted words, notably Heim and Heimat in German, heem and heim and Dutch, Heem and Heim in Low German, ham and home in English, hamm, Heem, and hiem in various Frisian dialects. Also French hameau, whose Old French ancestor hamelet gave us hamlet.
That would describe Heimat, yes.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heimat