Been waiting on a book like this, though I unthwear with his glossary wending of Germany as Germany and not ofoldly Dutchland. I understand that there is much unthwearness about it in the fellowship, but if France is wended as Frankland I feel Dutchland is a swither fit.
Hello! Author here. The reason I translated it as “Germany” is because the name was already in use by the Old English period. It’s true, Dutchland would be more true to Germanic roots, but I only focused on words which appeared after 1066. Cheers!
@@norsecarolina since you took time to anqueathed my post, I will buy your book. But as far I as could find, only Germania is found in Old English. Germany as we use it today was first written in the late 1300s, and is more likely rooted in the Old French speakshape of Germanie. Before and after that the Dutchland was more often known as Alemannia, also from Latin. Billwhitely the mostnear known true Old English word for German I could find is EaldSeaxan. -BTW Duchelond was used in Middle English.
@norsecarolina @WestlehSeyweld Colleagues, I liked your chat, and how you are scholars of Germanic languages and speakers of them. Together you two can work Folkish Anglish to be Folkish Saxonish Yolaish. You could take Old Norse, Old Frankish, Old Anglo Saxon, Old Frisian, Old Dutch and Limburgish, Old Ripuarian, Old Dutch, Yola, Norn, Nynorn, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Luxembrug, Hunskerian, Danish, Yddish, Frisian from the north, east and west and the Krio language and create a modal language, with a more simplified grammar and without Latinisms, like Sranantongo and Krio and then create a Germanic language for all of Anglophony. But the most important thing of all is to really remove the Latinisms. Contemporary English has nothing Germanic about it but is very Romanesque in its way of thinking and speaking. With this new language based on Folkish Anglish, and after these fusions being Folkish Saxonish Yolaish, you will truly place Anglophony within Grermanofonia once and for all. And ending the Neo-Latin and Neo-Hellenic French Norman era and Romance English once and for all in Anglophony I leave these ideas to make your project a success, hugs.
Grail Final: Cup Final. Good people, Anglish is confusing in its etymology, folkloric even illogical I wasted 2 minutes to understand that the end of the Grail is the popular cup holder. Too folkloric, even too funny. It better become a zonal language, it's confusing 😕 at its current stage, it won't prosper like that.
@@WestlehSeyweld Old English does have parts of the Word for Germany/Deutschland, 1. Theod meaning People (New Eng: Theed) and 2. Land. OE build being ''Theodiscland'' and Modern/New English: ''Theedishland''.
Craft: Technology Guys, I've been taking a look at the Anglish dictionary, there's no future for this language at its current stage. You cannot confuse craftsmanship with technology. Crafts are linked to subjective art and creativity. Technology has to do with science, standardized manufacturing, industrialization of products, there are current cases of robots producing technology for us, such as cars, planes, computers, robots today even perform medical surgeries. Anglish, a logical and coherent language today, will not be called technology craftsmanship anywhere in the world. Respectfully I attested and searched this.
Site which Page as what I've seen in the Book (on pg. 98) proves that to be untrue. Mayhaps you're confusing Capittel 8 with ''Craft'', but clearly from what I've read ''Craft'' is indeed its classical meaning: Power or Skill.
Nice
I bought :) Please let us know when the next books come out!
Been waiting on a book like this, though I unthwear with his glossary wending of Germany as Germany and not ofoldly Dutchland. I understand that there is much unthwearness about it in the fellowship, but if France is wended as Frankland I feel Dutchland is a swither fit.
Hello! Author here. The reason I translated it as “Germany” is because the name was already in use by the Old English period. It’s true, Dutchland would be more true to Germanic roots, but I only focused on words which appeared after 1066. Cheers!
@@norsecarolina since you took time to anqueathed my post, I will buy your book. But as far I as could find, only Germania is found in Old English. Germany as we use it today was first written in the late 1300s, and is more likely rooted in the Old French speakshape of Germanie. Before and after that the Dutchland was more often known as Alemannia, also from Latin. Billwhitely the mostnear known true Old English word for German I could find is EaldSeaxan.
-BTW Duchelond was used in Middle English.
@norsecarolina
@WestlehSeyweld
Colleagues, I liked your chat, and how you are scholars of Germanic languages and speakers of them.
Together you two can work Folkish Anglish to be Folkish Saxonish Yolaish. You could take Old Norse, Old Frankish, Old Anglo Saxon, Old Frisian, Old Dutch and Limburgish, Old Ripuarian, Old Dutch, Yola, Norn, Nynorn, German, Norwegian, Swedish, Luxembrug, Hunskerian, Danish, Yddish, Frisian from the north, east and west and the Krio language and create a modal language, with a more simplified grammar and without Latinisms, like Sranantongo and Krio and then create a Germanic language for all of Anglophony.
But the most important thing of all is to really remove the Latinisms.
Contemporary English has nothing Germanic about it but is very Romanesque in its way of thinking and speaking.
With this new language based on Folkish Anglish, and after these fusions being Folkish Saxonish Yolaish, you will truly place Anglophony within Grermanofonia once and for all.
And ending the Neo-Latin and Neo-Hellenic French Norman era and Romance English once and for all in Anglophony
I leave these ideas to make your project a success, hugs.
Grail Final: Cup Final.
Good people, Anglish is confusing in its etymology, folkloric even illogical
I wasted 2 minutes to understand that the end of the Grail is the popular cup holder.
Too folkloric, even too funny.
It better become a zonal language, it's confusing 😕 at its current stage, it won't prosper like that.
@@WestlehSeyweld Old English does have parts of the Word for Germany/Deutschland, 1. Theod meaning People (New Eng: Theed) and 2. Land. OE build being ''Theodiscland'' and Modern/New English: ''Theedishland''.
Where does dutch fit into things?
Craft: Technology
Guys, I've been taking a look at the Anglish dictionary, there's no future for this language at its current stage.
You cannot confuse craftsmanship with technology.
Crafts are linked to subjective art and creativity.
Technology has to do with science, standardized manufacturing, industrialization of products, there are current cases of robots producing technology for us, such as cars, planes, computers, robots today even perform medical surgeries.
Anglish, a logical and coherent language today, will not be called technology craftsmanship anywhere in the world.
Respectfully I attested and searched this.
Site which Page as what I've seen in the Book (on pg. 98) proves that to be untrue. Mayhaps you're confusing Capittel 8 with ''Craft'', but clearly from what I've read ''Craft'' is indeed its classical meaning: Power or Skill.