Europa — Vasconica-europa Semitica

Vennemann argues that after the last Ice Age, much of Western and Central Europe was inhabited by speakers of Vasconic languages , of which Basque is the only surviving member.

This "substrate" influenced the vocabulary and structure of the languages that eventually replaced them. Europa Vasconica-Europa Semitica

He even suggests these colonizers significantly impacted the development of Germanic languages , influencing everything from the invention of runes to the origins of deities like the Vanir . Academic Reception Vennemann argues that after the last Ice Age,

He identifies structural similarities between Insular Celtic languages (like Irish and Welsh) and Semitic/Hamitic languages, such as Verb-Subject-Object (VSO) word order. Structural similarities like VSO word order may be

The toponymic (place-name) links are tenuous and can be explained by other linguistic families.

Vennemann posits that starting in the fifth millennium BCE, Atlantic/Semitidic seafaring colonizers (related to Semitic speakers) settled the coastal regions of Western and Northern Europe.

Structural similarities like VSO word order may be typological coincidences rather than proof of direct contact.