
The study demonstrates incredible similarities in sound correspondences, in proots, in traditional roots and their derivatives, and in their grammatical systems. To prove this fact scientifically, the research compares Hamito-Semitic and Indo-European language families.

The research assumes that proots discovered in Hamito-Semitic family are found in all other families of languages and there is no language family which has completely lost any of such proots. All such elements are originally separate words, each having a well-defined meaning or grammatical function. The linguistic elements of any traditional root can be easily divided into ‘a primeval root, called proot’ compounded with another proot or old grammatical affixes. It demonstrates in a way as clear and evident as sunshine that Hamito-Semitic root is a complex word consisting of a number of elements agglutinated together and expressing a concrete or special meaning. The book includes three long-desired discoveries: 1. Its findings are revolutionary in linguistics they radically change our view of language and its historical evolution in the course of millennia, unveil the obvious relationships among world’s languages, and raze to ground the walls of might that the vicissitudes of time have built to keep language apart.

The present book is wholly based on new linguistic discoveries and without them it will never come into existence.
