Sat, May 24, 2025
Log in Register

Login to your account

Username
Password *
Remember Me

Create an account

Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.
Name
Username
Password *
Verify password *
Email *
Verify email *
Welcome, Guest
Username: Password: Remember me
  • Page:
  • 1

TOPIC: new balance 993 gl review new balance classics women's

new balance 993 gl review new balance classics women's 10 years 1 month ago #45511

  • fsnzerhp
  • fsnzerhp's Avatar
  • OFFLINE
  • Gold Boarder
  • Posts: 240
  • Karma: 0
Let's hop into a time machine and go back to the England of yore!
If this were a movie, no matter when we got out of the machine, we could walk up to people and start talking. It could be medieval times or the age of King Arthur's round table, and they'd just say, "Who art thou, varlet?" and we'd reply with something like, "We, uh, would-eth like-eth some beer-eth," #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] and we'd all party. Yeah, no.
I mean, new balance 993 gl review of new balance classics women's course they have to do that new balance 381 mens in movies, because we need to understand them. But this is reality. We're going to hear what they really talked like. Ready? Buckle up!
Shakespearean England
First stop: the early 1600s. The time of Shakespeare! Of course the English of Shakespeare and the King James Bible may seem flowery, but it's basically just new balance 940 black an older version of what we speak now. In fact, it's what linguists call Early Modern English. But the way they spoke it was not quite what we probably expect — or what you hear in the movies. Do you imagine some Queen's English accent? Or perhaps Cockney for the lower classes? Guess what: #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] the way they spoke it would sound to us more like a mix of Irish and pirate. Here, listen to Ben Crystal (son of linguist David Crystal) perform a sonnet in the pronunciation of Shakespeare's time:
Medieval England
Next stop: the 1300s. That's when Geoffrey Chaucer lived. Do you remember the Canterbury Tales? Here's how it starts:
Whan that Aprill, with his shoures soote
The droghte new balance 576 france buy of March hath perced to the roote
And bathed every veyne in swich licour,
Of which vertu engendred is the flour
You can probably sort out what's being said, generally. It has a few differences here and there, but with a little help and attention you can figure it out. But could you carry on a conversation in it? Could you even understand it if you heard it? Here's how it sounded, as read by Diane Jones:
Let's take the time machine back just another century — still in the Middle English period — and have a listen to a song from that time, as sung by the lovely ensemble Anonymous 4:
Here's a bit of the text (the þ new balance women's keyhole capri characters are how we used to write th):
Edi beo þu hevene quene
folkes frovre and engles blis,
moder unwemmed and maiden clene
swich in world non oþer nis.
Do you reckon you could just new balance cricket bats australia walk into an inn and order up some meat pie and ale in a place where they spoke this version of English?
But wait, there's more. A lot more. So far, we're still after English lost most of its heavy noun inflections and complex verbal conjugations — and changed a lot of its words. We #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] can thank invaders for that: French in the south (starting in 1066) and Scandinavians in the north (starting in the new balance purple white mid-800s but having more influence later on). Before they got to it, English was a whole other thing…
Old English
Old English is a bit of a misleading name. It's not understandable at all to modern English speakers; you'd have an easier time learning Dutch or Danish. Some people prefer to call it Anglo-Saxon, since it's the language that was brought over by the Angles and Saxons, invaders from new balance scrubs sale northern Germany who took over Britain in the 600s.
The most famous bit of literature from the Old English period is Beowulf. I'm sure we all know the beginning of Beowulf, right? No? Well, if you don't, here it is:
Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum,
þeodcyninga, þrym gefrunon,
hu ða æþelingas #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] ellen fremedon.
We're not with Bill and Ted anymore! Come on, step out of the time machine and let's listen to the words recited by Benjamin Bagby, who sounds like he grew up then:
Nice of them to give subtitles! Now get back into the machine. We're going to the 400s and 500s, to the time of King Arthur (if he existed).
Arthurian Britain
Did King Arthur speak Old English? Noooo. Do you remember that I said the Angles and Saxons took over Britain in the 600s? Arthurian Britain was before the Germanic invaders came and made the place England (Angle-land). What Arthur and his knights of the round table, #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] and all the other people around then new balance 420 macy's and there, would have been speaking was something we now call Brythonic or Brittonic: a Celtic language. Completely unlike modern English.
So obviously you're not going to get that pint of beer, because you're not going to be able to ask for it. And these people suddenly don't look so welcoming. So we scram back into the machine and put it in forward gear… But uh-oh. It doesn't go back to modern English. It womens new balance boots follows the people who spoke what they spoke in King Arthur's time. zapatillas new balance miami The Britons.
Brittonic didn't stop existing when the Anglo-Saxons invaded, you see. Anglo-Saxon didn't simply replace it. The people who spoke it retreated, some to Wales, some to Cornwall, some a little farther. Over the centuries, the language of the ones who retreated to Wales became modern Welsh, in which Llanfairpwllgwyngyll means "Parish of St. Mary in White Hazel Hollow." The language of those who retreated to Cornwall became Cornish, which was quite nearly wiped out in recent centuries, but is having a bit of a revival.
But our time machine is following the ones who kept the name of the Britons. They retreated across the English Channel — to a part of France that came to be named after them: Bretagne, or, in English, Brittany. The Celtic language spoken there, Breton, is descended from Brittonic, the language of King Arthur (with some French influence, of course). Listen to the Breton singer Nolwenn Leroy singing a Breton song about three young sailors (tri martolod yaouank):
Here are some of the lyrics (minus the repeats):
Tri martolod yaouank i vonet da veajiñ
Gant 'n avel bet kaset betek an Douar Nevez
E-kichen mein ar #file_links[E:\xrkeyword\1.txt,1,L] veilh o deus mouilhet o eorioù
Hag e-barzh ar veilh-se e oa ur servijourez
It's about three sailors who were blown far off course. We and our time machine — and our language — know something about that now… 相关的主题文章:


new balance 1063 women's shoe new balance 473 mens running shoe

nonnative × new balance cm997 dune new balance 686 shoes

new balance shoes las vegas new balance 1500 sale

new balance 609 flat feet new balance 620 france

new balance 442 on sale new balance men's mx608 water resistant cross-training s
The administrator has disabled public write access.
  • Page:
  • 1
Time to create page: 0.256 seconds

Search Forum

Keyword

Forum Login

My Recent Threads

  • No posts to display.

Forum Menu

Contact Us

Contact us today. We'd love to hear from you!!

Mail Us
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.


Phone
484-769-1653


Location
Berks County, Pa.

Some of Our Clients:

Now Offering Photo Booth Poster Collages!!

 

Another Event to Remember!

Call Us To Book Yours
484-769-1653