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#91 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Harrisburg outskirts
Device: Palms, K1-4s, iPads, iPhones, KV, KO1
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Gesundheit!!
then, going by the definition I found here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usufruct (no, I won't post the definition, just where I found it) Presumably that means I can huggggg your robot body all I want as long as I don't damage it. ![]() Or shall I go huggggg that horrific gourmand, Marc? :smitten too but can't stand his dietary habits: |
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#92 | |
Guru
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Karma: 102419
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Vienna, Austria
Device: iPhone
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Quote:
it's funny how english uses a lot of words that do not hint to any latin background. "window" - "fenestra" ![]() |
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#93 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Karma: 4632658
Join Date: Nov 2007
Device: none
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Quote:
Isn't this partly a product of repeated invasion and conquest (from about the 5th century up to and including the Norman conquest) bringing the Norman language and Anglo-Saxon languages with words of West and Norse/North Germanic origin? ...or something like that? Cheers, Marc |
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#94 |
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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Karma: 921169
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Paris, France
Device: eb1150 & is that a nook in her pocket, or she just happy to see you?
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german is a romance language ? i'm pretty sure that's not true... it seems to me german is, well, a *germanic* language, which is not the same thing at all. does it have roman origins as well ?
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#95 | |
Beepbeep n beebeep, yeah!
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Karma: 8255450
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin, aka America's IceBox
Device: iThingie, KmkII, I miss Zelda!
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Quote:
English is the true bastard son language of Europe. It draws from Germanic, Romance, Celtic, and then absorbs other languages like Ankh Morpork absorbs invaders. (Ghurka knife, anyone?) |
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#96 |
Chocolate Grasshopper ...
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Location: Scotland
Device: Muse HD , Cybook Gen3 , Pocketbook 302 (Black) , Nexus 10: wife has PW
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Interestingly from wikipedia :
I particularly like the summary at the end ... One of the consequences of the French influence is that the vocabulary of English is, to a certain extent, divided between those words which are Germanic (mostly West Germanic, with a smaller influence from the North Germanic branch) and those which are "Latinate" (Latin-derived, either directly from Norman French or other Romance languages). Numerous sets of statistics have been proposed to demonstrate the origins of English vocabulary. None, as yet, is considered definitive by most linguists. A computerised survey of about 80,000 words in the old Shorter Oxford Dictionary (3rd ed.) was published in Ordered Profusion by Thomas Finkenstaedt and Dieter Wolff (1973)[45] that estimated the origin of English words as follows: Influences in English vocabulary * Langue d'oïl, including French and Old Norman: 28.3% * Latin, including modern scientific and technical Latin: 28.24% * Other Germanic languages (including words directly inherited from Old English): 25% * Greek: 5.32% * No etymology given: 4.03% * Derived from proper names: 3.28% * All other languages contributed less than 1% A survey by Joseph M. Williams in Origins of the English Language of 10,000 words taken from several thousand business letters gave this set of statistics:[46] * French (langue d'oïl): 41% * "Native" English: 33% * Latin: 15% * Danish: 2% * Dutch: 1% * Other: 10% However, 83% of the 1,000 most-common, and all of the 100 most-common English words are Germanic.[47] The "skeleton" of the English language is Germanic, but the "flesh" is Latinate. |
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#97 |
zeldinha zippy zeldissima
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Karma: 921169
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Paris, France
Device: eb1150 & is that a nook in her pocket, or she just happy to see you?
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#98 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Device: none
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#99 |
Actively passive.
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: US
Device: Sony PRS-505/LC
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No, the appropriate response is whatever you would normally do when the English talk about Aussies and Yanks mangling the language. For me, I say "What's that again, Gov?"
Always a riot. I think Aussies have an inoculation against Anglophilia. Fosters. |
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#100 | |
Chocolate Grasshopper ...
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Location: Scotland
Device: Muse HD , Cybook Gen3 , Pocketbook 302 (Black) , Nexus 10: wife has PW
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Quote:
There's 4 nations that make up the UK , all use English as their main language . Plus within those nations each region is quite capable of mangling their own versions and sub-versions ... You must be able to tell a scouse from a geordie , from a cockney and a manx ? |
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#101 | |
Beepbeep n beebeep, yeah!
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: La Crosse, Wisconsin, aka America's IceBox
Device: iThingie, KmkII, I miss Zelda!
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#102 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Australians call the English English (or "pommy bastards"
![]() Cheers, Marc (whose Dad was born in Streatley, Berkshire, whose mum's ancestors were (mostly) from Wales, and who was himself born in Newcastle, though the Aussie one and not the Geordie one) |
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#103 | ||
Chocolate Grasshopper ...
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Location: Scotland
Device: Muse HD , Cybook Gen3 , Pocketbook 302 (Black) , Nexus 10: wife has PW
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Quote:
Quote:
For instance if an Englishman is doing well, he's English; but if a Welshman or Scot are doing well, then they are British. |
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#104 |
Actively passive.
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: US
Device: Sony PRS-505/LC
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I'm a Scots-Cherokee mutt, born in Texas.
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#105 | |
Wizard
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Location: UK
Device: Palm TX, CyBook Gen3
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Tags |
hugo and lefty, words |
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