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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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On the contrary, the place is best remembered for Blind Jack of Knaresborough who invented roads.
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Hatty wrote: |
Noah's dove didn't discover land, that was the raven's job, but brought back information as a reliable messenger must. Do messengers have to be killed to safeguard trade secrets? |
There is pages and pages of biblical stuff.
Simple.
Its day/life/light/fate overcoming night/death/dark/tricks
So Dover.
http://bit.ly/y4iFUU
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Pulp History

In: Wales
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The Romans called it Dubris (or Duvris) presumably from the current name of the place. The only similar word in Anglo Saxon is Dufan which means to 'dive' or 'drown' - could be memories of the flooding of the English Channel? _________________ Question everything!
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Pulp History

In: Wales
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The university of Wales give their 'proto-celtic' word 'Dubro' to mean water, without giving any clue as to where that comes from.
The examples they give are Dubro = Water, Dubro-Jara = Water Hen, and Dubro-Kwon = Otter.
It seems to me that all of these words are more easily explained if the Dubro root is interpreted closer to the Anglo Saxon meaning of 'to dive'. Seems again that the word could easily have travelled the other way just as easily. _________________ Question everything!
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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Hatty wrote: | Dover is connected via a so-called Roman trade route to Trier and Cologne via Boulogne. Ursula or Little Bear, a 'British princess', went on a pan-European pilgrimage ending at Cologne or Köln where she was murdered.
Noah's dove didn't discover land, that was the raven's job, but brought back information as a reliable messenger must. Do messengers have to be killed to safeguard trade secrets? |
No, but doves taste better than ravens.
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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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Unless you're ravenous of course. The etymology of which is the usual risible rubbish viz
early 15c., "obsessed with plundering, extremely greedy," from O.Fr. ravinos "rapacious, violent," from raviner "to seize," from ravine "violent rush, robbery" (see ravine). Meaning "voracious, very hungry" is from early 15c. Related: Ravenously. |
Misses the point entirely.
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Hatty
Site Admin

In: Berkshire
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Dover (and by extension Salisbury) is connected to Cologne/Coln via pigeons. Or Ursula Minor if you prefer great circle routes, via Dunkirk and Gent.
Cologne cathedral is the finest Gothic structure in Europe, even the philistine RAF let it be.
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Hatty
Site Admin

In: Berkshire
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Pardonnez-moi. The Flemish landing point on the Dover-Coln route is Koksijdge, just east of Dunkirk and site of Dunes Abbey (from where the Cistercian monks relocated to Bruges in the seventeenth century).
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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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Oh no, trouble at t' language mill:
http://www.newsinenglish.no/2012/11/27/english-is-a-scandinavian-language/
So a bunch of gen-u-wine academics have proved linguistically that English doesn't come from Anglo-Saxon. Of course they're a bunch of Scandischmucks so the Anglo-American rulers of the academic universe won't actually notice. Still it's the straw in the wind that will eventually break the camel's back.
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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Mick Harper wrote: | Oh no, trouble at t' language mill:
http://www.newsinenglish.no/2012/11/27/english-is-a-scandinavian-language/
So a bunch of gen-u-wine academics have proved linguistically that English doesn't come from Anglo-Saxon. Of course they're a bunch of Scandischmucks so the Anglo-American rulers of the academic universe won't actually notice. Still it's the straw in the wind that will eventually break the camel's back. |
Maybe we should ask the occupants of Doggerland what they spoke?
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Wile E. Coyote
In: Arizona
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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""Have you considered how easy it is for us Norwegians to learn English?"
Fair enough, but why is it so hard for English-speakers to learn Norwegian? I have a friend who's moved to Norway, funnily enough from Northampton, which is East Midlands. But he swears learning Norwegian is the most painful thing he's ever done.
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Mick Harper
Site Admin

In: London
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Actually this gives the lie to all notions of creolisation that orthodoxy relies on, eg Anglo-Saxon incorporating swathes of Norman French. Once a language moves even a small way (say, Spanish ... French) it is impossible for either group to understand the other. And two language groups form eg English and Urdu in Birmingham today (or Karachi for that matter). It makes no difference how related the two languages are.
One group may learn the language of the other but there is no melding of the languages. A few loan words glide effortlessly between the two in the ordinary way of any two side-by-side languages, but that is all.
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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In that case, can't we claim Old Norwegian is based on Old English? And that New Norwegian has changed more than New English?
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Boreades

In: finity and beyond
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Or that Old Norwegian and Old English are both based on Old-Something-Else-Probably-Underwater?
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