NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Re: Portuguese shipwreck question
From: John Huth
Date: 2009 Nov 4, 14:40 -0500
You folks sure get grumpy with each other!
I don't have a lot to contribute to the lingua franca discussion, but it did remind me of the time I visited my Grandmother's home town. It's along the Italian/French border west of Torino. This is the home of the Valdese, who were followers of Peter Waldo, and were chased out Lyon by the Pope in the middle ages. When I spoke with some of my older relatives, I found that the original language was some form of french.
The most interesting aspect of the visit was this: each village, although separated by only a few kilometers, had a slightly different, yet recognizable dialect. When I say "recognizable" - I mean by someone like me who has only a limited knowledge of french. This was some version of a Languedoc variant. So, in the space of a few km, there were substantial shifts in dialect. I can readily see how sliced up languages would be in the middle ages, if this locality is any indication.
In Arabic, what does the prefix "Al" mean? I see that "Alconstantine" would be Constantinople.
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From: John Huth
Date: 2009 Nov 4, 14:40 -0500
You folks sure get grumpy with each other!
I don't have a lot to contribute to the lingua franca discussion, but it did remind me of the time I visited my Grandmother's home town. It's along the Italian/French border west of Torino. This is the home of the Valdese, who were followers of Peter Waldo, and were chased out Lyon by the Pope in the middle ages. When I spoke with some of my older relatives, I found that the original language was some form of french.
The most interesting aspect of the visit was this: each village, although separated by only a few kilometers, had a slightly different, yet recognizable dialect. When I say "recognizable" - I mean by someone like me who has only a limited knowledge of french. This was some version of a Languedoc variant. So, in the space of a few km, there were substantial shifts in dialect. I can readily see how sliced up languages would be in the middle ages, if this locality is any indication.
In Arabic, what does the prefix "Al" mean? I see that "Alconstantine" would be Constantinople.
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
NavList message boards: www.fer3.com/arc
Or post by email to: NavList@fer3.com
To , email NavList+@fer3.com
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