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Theophile Obenga's "Negro-Egyptian" linguistic phylum
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Swenet: [QB] How can something be debunked when it hasn't even been replicated and peer reviewed. How many researchers have independently come up with something even remotely resembling Obenga's phyla propositions in peer reviewed journals? Is Obenga even a linguist? What multi-disciplinary evidence is there for Negro-Egyptian? We know all pristine Afro-Asiatic speakers (including relict and at times excluded Omotic speakers) had/have a group of NRY E-M35 and mtDNA M1 sublineage carriers as their [b]signature[/b] common ancestors, so we know they descent from the same proto-language speaking community at some point in the terminal pleistocene. We know all Afro-Asiatic speakers have/had specific cultural traits like henotheism in common. We know the Berber language is strongly correlated with NRY E-M81, which branches off the same Y chromosome that unites all Afrasan speakers (E-M35). We know Afrasan speakers have words for specific inventions like grindstones in common. What are such fundamental, unlikely to have been acquired by simple borrowing/liaisons, but rather, common ancestry indicating multi-disciplinary unifying traits within ''Negro-Egyptian''? [/QB][/QUOTE]
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