OFF: English (was Mountain Grill)
Jill Strobridge
jill.strobridge at BLUEYONDER.CO.UK
Mon Feb 28 16:40:37 EST 2005
Seems to have come full circle then! Since I understand that
Sanskrit is the closest there is to a root language for all the
Indo-European languages including Celtic. Celtic of course
evolving into two families British/Welsh/Breton(& Cornish? - can't
remember offhand) and Irish/Scottish gaelic. Admittedly very
little (if any) British/Welsh gaelic has survived into spoken
English but I think that British 'P' Celtic/Gaelic associations can
still be found in place and landscape names - though mostly in the
West. To be honest I need a placename directory or something to
be able to give convincing examples but I'd suggest Penrith is one.
jill
----- Original Message -----
From: "Doug Pearson" <jasret at MINDSPRING.COM>
To: <BOC-L at LISTSERV.ISPNETINC.NET>
Sent: Monday, February 28, 2005 7:38 PM
Subject: Re: OFF: English (was Mountain Grill)
> On Mon, 28 Feb 2005 11:07:58 +0000, Carl Edlund Anderson
> <cea at CARLAZ.COM>
> wrote:
>>Still, as languages go, English has been extremely flexible in
>>absorbing
>>vocabulary from just about anything it can find :)
>
> With the most recent large-scale absorbtion probably being from
> Hindu
> during the 18th/19th-century occupation of India (thug, pundit,
> etc.)?
>
> -Doug
> jasret at mindspring.com
>
>
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