It is not the satisfacted answer.
The synonym of "Great Britain" is "Great Union".
The root of the word "Britain" is the word from Torah "Brit" -
It is not the satisfacted answer.
The synonym of "Great Britain" is "Great Union".
The root of the word "Britain" is the word from Torah "Brit" - Union.
How often do you have to be told - as I have done before - that this is utter rubbish. Wiki.
The modern Welsh name for the island is (Ynys) Prydain. This demonstrates that the original Common Brittonic form had initial P- not B- (which would give **Brydain) and -t- not -tt- (else **Prythain). This is best explained as containing a stem *pritu- (Welsh pryd, Old Irish cruith; < Proto-Celtic *kwritu-), meaning "shape, form", combined with an adjectival suffix. This leaves us with *Pritania
It has been speculated that the name of the island probably derives from the demonym of its inhabitants, which would be *Pritanī, singular *Pritanos, modelled on Latin Britannus, -i. It is further popularly supposed that this demonym may refer to some practice of body art or tattooing.
It has nothing to do with the Hebrew word for "Union". The Celtic or pre-Celtic languages from which "Britsin" is derived do not belong to the Semitic family, but are quite different language groups. So what you are stating is completely nonsensical. In the nineteenth century there was a sect of insane people - the British Israelites - who used to propose nonsensical etymologies like yours. A few of them still exist. They resemble you in many ways, having fantasies about combining the British Empire with a resurrected Israel, as you wish to do with the US Empire in your
New Saturday Great Union. According to wiki, these lunatics
... claim numerous links in historical linguistics between ancient Hebrew and various European place names and languages. As an example; proponents claim that “British” is derived from the Hebrew words “Berit” and “Ish”, and should therefore be understood as “Covenant Man”. These words have other roots and this interpretation of the Hebrew is incorrect. Another example is Rhys' assertion of equivalence between Cymry (the native Welsh name for the British) and Cimmerian, which is at odds with the generally accepted derivation of Cymry from an earlier Celtic form *kom-broges (lit. "with-land"), meaning "people of the same country", or compatriot; only the modern form of the word looks similar. Yet another example is the alleged connection between the Irish 'Tuatha Dé Danann' and the Tribe of Dan. Secular sources indicate that the true root of this phrase is the 'People of the Goddess Danu'.
Your interpretation of "Britain" is an absurd fantasy. Please remove it from your mind at once.