Archaeological-antiquarian analysis consists of using archaeological and antiquarian methods to determine the nature of the text, such as the nature of the object bearing the inscription, and the circumstances and location of its discovery. An example of ignoring this stage would be to describe the
Pyrgi Tablets as part of a temple archive, as some commentators did when the tablets were found in 1964, when quite clearly the tablets had been nailed to a wall as a notice. Part of this stage is also rigorously checking the
epigraphic or
palaeographic details of the inscription concerned.
Vladimir Georgiev's claim that Etruscan is related to
Hittite was largely based on a non-existent word
esmi which had been incorrectly read from an inscription, while
Mario Alinei's 2003 claim that the word
iθal means "drink" and that Etruscan is thus based on Hungarian is ruled out by the fact that
iθal occurs in one single inscription and does not re-occur in the many hundreds of known inscribed Etruscan
symposium vessels which might be expected to contain the word "drink" if their Latin equivalents are anything to go by. ==Formal-structural analysis==