Arabic, French, & Greek loanwords in Sicilian
Greek words spread through Aramaic & Arabic
Features of Sabir Pidgin (clip 1)
Sabir Pidgin Language on the Barbary Coast
Sabir – A Pidgin Lingua Franca
Greek influence through Old Church Slavonic
Greek religious words borrowed into Latin
The Roman Empire Absorbed the Greek-speaking World
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Oh! So there are actually english speaking people that never heard about the french word “elle”. Didn’t know that.
Why would they know THAT word specifically? It’s not in the English language.
It’s much weirder that they practically needed a sabbatical retreat to figure out the meaning of “prépare” and “diner”.
@YourCreepyUncle.
General education and common sense.
Every single swede, in my home country Sweden, that has finished school, can translate “elle” correctly. That’s for sure. Wether they have studied the french language, or not, doesn’t matter.
@@whojanson6751it’s not something people learn at school, is it? I could only guess the meaning of that word because I learn Spanish
Spanish + English and you can guess it correctly
Although you will not recognize some important verbs: prendre, partir, mettre, sortir etc.
@harammarah9743 I meant it for this particular example.
Просто поздравь коллегу с днем рождения))
Pronouns are the firsts things you learn in English
I don’t know, do ‘mama’ and ‘dada’ really count as pronouns?
No it means She’s preparing or she prepares the dinner in France but in Canada, dîner means lunch.
Don’t worry! American also bastardized the British English 😅
And how do they say dinner in Canadian French?
@@leonardodesouza5470 There’s souper for supper
She’s making lunch in Canadian French 😋
ktx 다 정차해주는 이유 ㄷㄷ 속도는 새마을호급으로 낮추고 요금은 ktx급으로 ㄷㄷ
It would be fun to hear them read French.
This is probably the easiest possible example for an english speaker.
Yes, it’s the first one out of 10 or 11 in the video.
Next time you can try Dutch/German or Dutch/English😊