Comments by "SaBa" (@saba1030) on "RobWords"
channel.
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@Bjowolf2
Well, German language has "der, die, das", while Lower-Saxon and English just have "de/the" and so on.
Btw, by language scientists there are the West- Germanic languages: English, Dutch, Flamic, German.
And the East Germanic languages: Danish, Swedish, Norwegian
Just saying
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@xaverlustig3581
Correct, and my answer was and still is = Lower-Saxon language still is in use until today....by about 4ish million Germans living along the coast lines of the North Sea and Baltic Sea 😊...and the simularity still is VERY visible 😅
Lower-Saxon = English
he,se, mie, yi = he,she, me, you
dat/wat = that/what
de = the (no : der, die, das)
us = us
as = as
water = water
school = school
broken = broken
open = open
beer = beer
soster = sister
modder = mother "dd" = "th"
klock tein = ten o'clock
etc, etc... 😊
Greetings 🖐
Edit typo/autocorrect
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@WaterShowsProd
The Lower-Saxon language doesn't have noun genders either.
It also has just "de" = "the", the "e" in "de" gets pronounced like the "e"in "the".
Unfortunately high German always gets compared with English and the other Germanic languages, instead it should be compared with the Lower-Saxon language, as that is the root of todays English...
Lower-Saxon language still gets spoken by about 4ish million Germans living along the coast lines of the North Sea and Baltic Sea.
Lower-Saxon = English
he, se, mie, yi = he, she, me, you
dat/wat = that/what
de = the "d" = "th"
us = us
as = as
water = water
school = school
broken = broken
open = open
beer = beer
soster = sister
modder = mother "dd" = "th"
klock tein = ten o'clock
etc, etc
Lower-Saxon gets pronounced the "German" way, but the "r" gets rrroled ...which might sound a bit "Scottish" 😁
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😂
Well, "de Welschen/the Welsh" the ancient Saxons were calling all those tribes which were living to the west of their territory (todays England), the meaning is "the other ones, the ones from abroad, the strangers".
Btw, the Romans were calling ALL tribes living to the right side of the river Rhine "Germanic", while those tribes which were living there didn't even call themselfes that.
Like you are calling yourself "Cymry", the "Germans" are calling themselfs "Deutsch"...
The term Deutsch origins from the term = Thiutisk = us people....and over the last 2.000ish years changed into tysk, duits, dutch, teutsch, düütsch, deutsch 😊
There you go...😅
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