Either from the Proto-West Germanic “burg”, which means fortification/fortified town (maybe goes even back further to the Proto-Germanic “burgz”)
or possibly the Ancient-Greek word “pýrgos”, which was a tower fort
or maybe something else. Proto-Celtic or if we go way back: the Proto-Indo-European bʰergʰ- “to protect”
There’s a lot of speculation involved to where exactly the roots are, but in the end it all means a small castle or fortified town in which the “burger” lived.
Americans learning to spell bourgeoisie: Imagine a burger, spelt differently
Werner herzog spelling bourgeoisie: I do not respect the french language
in dutch burger means citizen
It’s because all those words have the same root:
Either from the Proto-West Germanic “burg”, which means fortification/fortified town (maybe goes even back further to the Proto-Germanic “burgz”)
or possibly the Ancient-Greek word “pýrgos”, which was a tower fort
or maybe something else. Proto-Celtic or if we go way back: the Proto-Indo-European bʰergʰ- “to protect”
There’s a lot of speculation involved to where exactly the roots are, but in the end it all means a small castle or fortified town in which the “burger” lived.![emoji doggirl-smart doggirl-smart](https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/45e26041-453d-48ff-8a88-10d41b420b39.png)
Cheesed…borgar?