sexist language
Steven Ryan
smryan at garth.UUCP
Wed Nov 23 12:12:55 AEST 1988
>As for foreign words, English speakers like to boast that the
>English language contains a great many of them, but in reality,
>I've always been non-plussed by this claim. I don't find that the
>average American newspaper uses that many foreign words and
>phrases, and anyway very few of them are very common words.
The foreign words are predominately borrowings from Old French from after 1066.
Words like: foreign, language, contains, reality, non-plussed, (?) claim,
average, uses, phrases, common, predominately, borrowings.
They also include borrowings directly from Latin (the missionaries), like
biscop; and from north german, like skirt, or skiff.
Are these foreign words? They are certainly not `native' german.
--
-- s m ryan
---------------------------------------
_
Then Guthrun crossed the wasted lands
and combed her hair with sooty hands.
Alone she watched the oceans churning,
and sang of heroes, fame most yearning.
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