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  1. 8 Move to 'Anglic languages' 3 comments. 9 Requested move 15 November 2015. 19 comments. 10 ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Yola_dialectYola dialect - Wikipedia

    Yola, more commonly and historically the Forth and Bargy dialect, was a dialect of the Middle English language once spoken in the baronies of Forth and Bargy in County Wexford, Ireland. As such, it was probably similar to the Fingallian dialect of the Fingal area. Both became functionally extinct in the 19th century when they were replaced by ...

  3. New Testament. A possible reference to Jewish practices of angelic tongues is 1 Corinthians 13:1 "If I speak in the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal." The distinction "of men" and "of angels" may suggests that a distinction was known to the Corinthians. If a distinction is intended then 1 ...

  4. Anglic ( IPA: [ˈæŋ.ɡlɪk]) is a West Goetic language originating in northern Tiperyn on the Goidelia subcontinent. Its earliest form, Old Anglic, developed from western Artemian Goetic languages in the 9th Century CE after being brought to Goidelia by Goetic invaders. Anglic is closely related to Tipsprek —the dominant Goetic language on ...

  5. Fundamental. » All languages. » Languages by family. » Indo-European. » Germanic. » West Germanic. » Anglo-Frisian. » Anglic. This is the main category of the Anglic languages .

  6. Frisian languages belong to the West Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages, the most widespread language family in Europe and the world. Its closest living genealogical relatives are the Anglic languages , i.e. English and Scots ( Anglo-Frisian languages ); together with the also closely related Low Saxon dialects the two groups make up the group of North Sea Germanic languages .

  7. Elbe Germanic, also called Irminonic or Erminonic, [2] is a term introduced by the German linguist Friedrich Maurer (1898–1984) in his book, Nordgermanen und Alemanen, to describe the unattested proto-language, or dialectal grouping, ancestral to the later Lombardic, Alemannic, Bavarian and Thuringian dialects.