Meaning drift

Meaning drift, in eretidish speechlore, is a happening whereby words shift in meaning over

a time spell, ending in meaning unlikenesses between kinwords.

For showing, the English word to starve is akin with the German sterben ("to die"). Though

both words arose from a shared West Teutonish root *sterb-a- ("to die"), and their meanings

are still somewhat akin, meaning drift has made their true meanings unlike. The same may

happen within a tongue, moreso when a word is wordlinked. For showing, English to hurdle is

kinword to hard and is wordlinked with the -le oftenness afterfast.

A more farther lodestar is with the English word black, which is kinword with Slavish words

for white (Russian белый) the put together Ur-Indo-Europish root for both is *bhel. English

black comes from Teutonish *blakaz, a bygone deedhoneword of a workword meaning "to blaze."

As an honeword, the word would show something that has burned and since what is burnt is

often black, the shift in meaning makes more sense.