Native english people got cucked by Romans, Saxons, vikings and french. Is there a more pathetic cunt lol
Is there a "language" as FRENCHED as English?
>119804231
>119805474
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They always go on about how many words are of french and latin origin but they never weight them by frequency
>B-BUT WHAT ABOUT LA FREQUENCINOOOOOOOOO
>THE FRENCH WORDS IN ENGLISH DO NOT EXIST BECAUSE I DO NOT NOT THEM
>I DO NOT NOT
It's true. It also helps that native english speakers are usually taught which words are germanic and which ones are latinate; it makes picking up vocabulary easy. I can get by in Spanish but with German I wouldn't even know where to start.
germanic words in english are soulful, latin words are cold and clinical terms
what aboout Austria
Italians, Slavs, Germans, Bohemians. I don't even know how I would place you ethnically. Though culturally you are some kind of south German
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Most words in spoken English are Germanic
CONFIRMED there IS a French tranny janny somewhere on Yas Forums right now, NOW, possibly more than one.
I'm going to have to repeat some points over again, sorry about that:
French was a terrible invention, the worst, certainly the worst among Indo-European languages, the equivalent of Chinese badly spoken. It is phoney on too many points to count (even for specialists), a deeply pretentious language, a lifeless schema with only pretensions to the truth. It is entirely founded in the classic French arrogance and stupidity; it is inseparable from the cowardice and the bowel movement problems congenital to the Gallic people, their blind uncompromising exaltation of pleasure and sensation above all else, their ineffectuality and their naivety. It's redeeming characteristics are those elements which are closest to Latin (a reasonable but tragically overrated language), but on every point at which it strays from this Roman standard it flails and falls into fallacy, nonsense, and hot air, much in the same way that most every French foray of military nature in their long history has also failed. There you have it, the English language equivalent of a few pages of a French writer or thinker. France is an inherently derivative language, and has found its philosophy by copying the Germans, its poetry by copying the Italians, its novel and its song lyric by copying the Anglo world, and its prestige through the sheer intensity of a pretentious French circlejerk.