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  1. The early Anglo-Frisian and Old Saxon speech communities lived close enough together to form a linguistic crossroads which is why they share some of the traits otherwise only typical of Anglo-Frisian languages. However, despite their common origins, English and Frisian have become very divergent, largely due to the heavy Norse and French ...

  2. Línguas anglo-frísias. As línguas anglo-frísias, por vezes chamadas de línguas germânicas insulares, são um grupo de idiomas germânicos ocidentais ingevônicas, que consistem do inglês antigo, do frísio antigo e de seus descendentes. [ 1] Sua árvore genealógica é: As línguas anglo-frísias distinguem-se de outros idiomas ...

  3. Since 1956, West Frisian has an official status along with and equal to Dutch in the province of Friesland. It is used in many domains of Frisian society, among which are education, legislation, and administration. In 2010, some sixty public transportation ticket machines in Friesland and Groningen added a West Frisian-language option.

  4. 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.

  5. 10 de mai. de 2013 · The article shows a “simplified family tree” of Germanic languages with Anglo-Frisian as a direct ancestor of Old English and Old Frisian. While it's “now believed that the hypothesis that Old English and Frisian can be derived from a single Anglo-Frisian mother tongue is an oversimplification” ( Hallen, 1998 ), it's likely that Anglo-Saxon and Old Frisian belonged to a group of ...

  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.