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2007-12-26 02:01:22 · 7 answers · asked by Ensee 2 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

7 answers

The Frisian Islands are an archipelago of Islands spread along the eastern edge of the North Sea along the coasts of the Netherlands and Germany. Now for the rest of the story. Contemporary Celts, most noteably the Irish and the Scots, speak an Anglo-Frisian language just as their English and American-English counterparts do. Here's how. Anglo-Frisian is a subdivision of Germanic languages, which is in turn divided into several sub-categories:

------Anglo-Frisian, or Insular Anglo-Frisian, Languages--English and Scots (as opposed to Scots-Gaelic, which is Celtic)

------Frisian, or Continental Anglo-Frisian--West Frisian, Saterland Frisian, or East Frisian, and North Frisian

Anglo-Frisian languages are characterized by the palatalization of the Proto-Germanic k to a coronal affricate between front vowels. In other words, English speakers say cheese instead of kase (German) or kaas (Dutch). Nevertheless, it is also noticeable that English and Scots have a similar vocabulary to Dutch and German. English church is Scots kirk, Dutch kerk, and German kirche.

Highland Scots* may be Celtic, and a few still speak Scottish Gaelic just as their Irish cousins many speak Irish Gaelic. However, many of the inhabitants of Scotland (more specifically 1.5 million of them), Northern Ireland, and the Republic of Ireland speak a version of English known as "braid" (or broad) Scots, which is part of the Anglo-Frisian language family.

Incidentally, the Library of Congress is phasing out its Scots-literature collection and instead classifying all Scots writers as English. As an American of Scottish, Irish, and English descent who is familiar with both Scottish and English authors, I wish to publically protest. The Scots and English may both be subjects of the United Kingdom, but the Scots definitely aren't English.

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*Traditionally, Highland Scots were those Scots who lived North of the Fifth of the Clyde or were inhabitants of the Hebridean Islands.

2007-12-26 05:40:21 · answer #1 · answered by Ellie Evans-Thyme 7 · 0 1

Not at all. Celtic, like Germanic, is a large general cultural reference to a group European group that shares linguistic,genetic, and cultural traits. The modern Celts you might find are the Galicians, Irish, Scots, Manx,Welsh and Bretons.
Anglo-Frisian would be a reference to someone or something which shares traits or influence or participation of Angles and Frisians, two Germanic tribes ( Angles from Anglia in what is now Germany and Frisians from what is now Holland) who invaded Great Britain and helped form what is now England.

2007-12-26 02:23:40 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

No. Anglo-Frisians are a Germanic people; the Celts are not.

2007-12-26 02:04:37 · answer #3 · answered by snowbaal 5 · 0 0

Anglo-frisian

2016-11-09 23:03:48 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Not at all. Celts are Celts. Frisians are a Viking-like people in a chain of islands in the north Sea belonging to the Netherlands, Germany, or Denmark. Angles are also Teuton, not Celt.

2007-12-26 02:04:49 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Information is essentially the same as data - it is a collection of facts. It contains everything that is known about a topic, but on its own is not terribly useful. Knowledge is the useful product of information put together with a context in mind. Synthesizing the raw information into groupings and formats that make sense together - a flow chart showing troubleshooting steps, a spreadsheet of financial figures, a report showing which employees are paid over $35000/year in salary - creates knowledge. Edit: Neither of these on their own is Wisdom, which would be a third category. Wisdom is the retained knowledge and decision-making skills to use what is known and apply it to making choices in a context. E.g. A senior manager knows the what financial results imply for the company in the near future because he has studied previous reports, market publications, business admin theory, etc. A poker player folds his hand because he sees his opponent glancing repeatedly at the glass on the table (information) and interprets it as the one of his opponent's 'tells' (knowledge).

2016-05-26 07:07:10 · answer #6 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

"Frisian" means "from Friesland" which is in the Netherlands, so no.

2007-12-26 02:04:35 · answer #7 · answered by anna 7 · 0 0

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