Comments by "SaBa" (@saba1030) on "RobWords"
channel.
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@MartialArtUK
Nope, they're speaking gaelic..
But high German is NOT Lower-Saxon language, so in Lower Saxon it still would be Welsch/Welsh...
Btw, you Brits are calling us how the Romans were calling us = German...and the English language gave Cymru the term "Wales" π₯³
The term "deutsch" origins from "Thiutisk = us people", and it evolved over the last 2.000ish years to = tuisk, tysk, duits, dutch, teutsch, dΓΌΓΌtsch, deutsch π
So you're calling the Dutch = deutsch...π
Btw, nice vids at your channel...used to do Tae Kwon Do π
Cheers π»
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In case you're English, then about 30ish % of your DNA is Saxon DNA, all the other people coming over into todays England didn't leave any notable DNA in the English DNA.
About 10ish % of the English DNA is shared from ancient tribes from Danish/Jutes, Belgians, Dutch, Frisians, Normans.
The Lower-Saxon language is partly the root of todays English ...
Lower-Saxon = English
he,se, mie, yi = he, she, me, you
dat/wat = that/ what
de = the "dd" = "th"
us = us
as = as
water = water
school = school
broken = broken
open = open
beer = beer
modder = mother
klock tein = ten o'clock ...etc, etc...
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@silvertbird1 Officialy there are the "Western Germanic" languages, like English, Dutch, Flamic, German and the "Eastern Germanic" languages, like Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, as ALL of them are based on the "Indogermanic language roots".
Not to forget, opposit to an Island, over here on the Continent the "language borders" are not nessesarily where a country border is, apart from each country's official language. Therefor in most (country border) regions the languages are "swapping" into the other country π
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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 themselves that, instead they were calling themselves "Thiutisk = us people ", and then evolved over the last 2.000ish years to = tuisk, tysk, duits, dutch, teutsch, dΓΌΓΌtsch, deutsch π
Btw, the today English term "window" is Lower-Saxon language and the meaning is "wind eye".
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