• @[email protected]
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    172 months ago

    Aren’t one of the invader groups that he fought off the Saxons and other Germanic groups?

  • @Bricriu
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    152 months ago

    I knew several of these words! Hooray for the remnants of pre-semester-abroad self-taught Welsh!

  • Alex
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    132 months ago

    Nice to see the Celtic languages referenced by smbc. Da iawn.

  • @[email protected]
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    52 months ago

    inspiration taken from the ‘Once and Future’ comic series perhaps? pretty much this exact thing happens in it. it’s quite short and finished, highly recommend it!

    • @jeeva
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      12 months ago

      Came to say roughly the same thing!

  • @[email protected]
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    42 months ago

    Is the definition of English as a “French-German creole” (or even a romance-germanic creole) at all mainstream in linguistics? I was under the impression that mainstream linguistics classifies modern English firmly as West Germanic, and discounts the Normans’ infusion of French vocabulary into it as inconsequential.

    • wanderer
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      132 months ago

      I don’t know about that but definition, creole, romance, impression, classifies, modern, firmly, discounts, and infusion all have french origins.

    • WFH
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      62 months ago

      My headcanon theory is indeed that English is a creole language.

      Mix the grammar, verbes and functional words of the lower-status people (natives, imported slaves) and nouns of the higher-status people (invaders, colonizers and masters) and boom, after a few generations you get a creole language.

      This theory works surprisingly as well for English as for, for example, Caribbean creoles.