Bernd 08/07/2020 (Fri) 18:00:06 No.39089 del
(11.66 KB 280x220 entomologist.jpg)
>>39083
Since Greek sources preserved the name I would assume the -is/-ais appendage is them twisting the name to suit them, that leaves us with Tana or Tan, which is, well, just Danu or Dan. I didn't mention but Danu itself is possibly proto-Indo-European right now I don't wanna into my opinion on "proto-indo-european" language, and especially not into the so called Kurgan hypothesis.... However the Dan/Tan, still could come from the Turkic teng -> tan/ten/tin stem.

Let's jump one river to the east, the Volga's name preserved a supposedly proto-Slavic word, volga (now in vlaga, vlaha, voloha forms in many Slavic languages), which means wetness.
The Volga's names in various Turkic languages is/was Itil, Etil, Atil, etc. also means river or big river - which very well might be the origin of the name of the Great Khagan/Shan-ju, Attila. Western (German) historians say ofc that he was named after the Gothic word atta/ata = father. On that note noone considers the Hungarian atya = father (in Mordvin: ata...) because: "nooooooooo, Hungarians cannot be the descendants of the Huns, nooooo the Huns couldn't speak Hungarian because they spoke [insert whatever other language pulled out of their asses], saying Hungarians = Huns is a mortal siiiiiiiiin" - such cases
The previously mentioned Dentumoger is also called Etelköz, a name coined in the 19th century on the basis of emperor Constantine VII's report. In his work De Administrando Imperio, he reports about a region what he calls: Atel kai Ouzou, Atelk Ouzou, Atelkouzou, Atelouzou, and Etel kai Kouzou; and says the Hungarians (whom he calls on a couple of other names, like Hun, Turk, or Sabir) lived there. Etel is simply the Volga, and -köz = space between. But what Constantine meant under Ouzu or Kouzu? Who the fuck knows.