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  1. Linguistic maps of Anglo-Frisian languages‎ (3 C, 3 F) E. Early Modern English‎ (1 C) English language‎ (74 C, 1 P, 566 F) F. Frisian language‎ (15 C, 17 F) O.

  2. Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 46. Chapters: English languages, Frisian languages, Old English, Scots language, Middle English, World Englishes, West Frisian language, North Frisian language, Yola language, West Frisian grammar, Saterland Frisian language, Stadsfries, Schneider's Dynamic ...

  3. The linguistic reason to think so is that almost every characteristic innovation of Anglo-Frisian has a plausible motivation in terms of infl uences from Brittonic. It seems that the later Frisians originated as Anglo-Saxons, occupying territory between Kentish and Pre-Mercian, who left England and went back to the continent, of course to the coast, around 540.

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  5. アングロ・フリジア語群(アングロ・フリジアごぐん、英: Anglo-Frisian languages )は、インド・ヨーロッパ語族 西ゲルマン語群に属し、英語やフリジア語を含む語群である。いくつかの音変化によって他の西ゲルマン語群から区別される。

  6. 6 de set. de 1999 · Frysk en Frij. Frisian is a member of the Germanic family of languages, and is the closest living language related to English. It is still spoken today in small pockets of the Netherlands and northern and western Germany. The Frisian language is divided geographically into three groups: North Frisian, East Frisian, and West Frisian.

  7. 1 de set. de 2015 · Frisian. West Frisian, more commonly known as Frisian, is a language that is primarily spoken in Friesland, a region of the Netherlands. It has about 470,000 native speakers and 120,000 second language speakers. The language is noteworthy for being, linguistically speaking, the closest relative of Modern English still in existence (with the ...