In Korean, words from Indo-Tibet, Central Asia and Persian.
There are many, but I think the Indo-European language family also
started here.
That way, it is possible to influence and receive, and you can see it
by looking at Korean.
pop
popular푸풀어-->부풀어 bupuleo
Vowel change
부풀다 bufulda(swell,bubble,enlarge,increase)
"r" pronunciation is weakened and omitted; bufur-->>buf
root:bup,buf
public푸불맀어 부풀맀어 =mass 모았어-->뫘어gathered,collected,grouped
puff,increase,bloat
kh-->ch-->sh-->s
Even in the 15th century during the Joseon Dynasty, there were many cases
where original vowelization did not occur, such as bl-->bul(fire),
ml-->mul(water), blda-->bulda.
fl,pl,bl--->ful,bul
Korean
bulda 불다
Verb to inflate, to inflate; Swollen,Increase in number or quantity
plenty--->a lot of,many,much
플은-->블은-->불은 increased
풀다.pulda
root-->pul
It is a concept that expands by scattering, not gathering.
It makes things that are tied, wound, entangled, or merged into a state
not otherwise.
Uzbek
bo‘rtmoq
Verb to inflate, to inflate; Swollen
flourish
1.번창하다 (=thrive)
2잘 자라다, 잘 지내다 (=thrive)
Hindi
फूलना [phu:lnā:]
1. Intransitive verbs and other verbs swell. Expand
2. To decorate with flowers of intransitive verbs and other verbs. blossom.
Flourish
3. Intransitive verbs, transitive verbs are filled with joy. Become fun It is good and good.
Feel proud
Gujarati
ફૂલવું
Phūlavuṁ
-->flourish
Nepali
फलोरी
Phalōrī
-->flourish
punjabi
ਫੁੱਲ
Phula
-->flourish
This word means many people.
The number swells more and more.
swell,swollen
s-
s- is an expression that emphasizes strongly
We Korean say "seda,theda"means "strong".
root:well,wollen
w is a change from v and f pronunciations in the past.
부르bur 혹은 부른bureon
It swells and grows.
puf=pup=pop=bub
bubble 부풀-->부불
Bubbles become larger and larger as air enters, and
they swell up and increase in volume.
flate:플렀다-->불렀다 buleotda.
===>full 푸르fur-->부르bur
많이 먹었더니 배가 아주 부르다.
푸르다furda-->부르다vurda
부풀다 bupulda
1.(부피가 커지다) (공기·가스 등으로) inflate, (빵 등이) rise
2.(피부가) swell (up), be swollen