If that is right, then it looks like the average is 37% Anglo-Saxon, 22% Celtic, 20% "Western European" (area covered by France and German), 9% Scandinavian, with variations based on region. — schopenhauer1
Phenotypical characteristics are superficial and you can find more in common with a person from the other side of the earth who is a different size, shape or colour that you can with your own brother. — charleton
How is it that the Celtic language was completely replaced even if the people remained — schopenhauer1
I have a degree in ancient history and archaeology and a Masters in Intellectual History. — charleton
a myth that there are such things as races and that races somehow determine behaviour — charleton
Being "English" is a myth with arbitrary characteristics not carried by eggs or sperm, it is wholly mythical and learned. — charleton
How is it that the Celtic language was completely replaced even if the people remained. — schopenhauer1
Now show me the gene that says "I'm English" — charleton
The language of a given group of people may disappear IF it is advantageous to abandon one's own language for someone else's. Take the languages spoken by immigrants to the United States in the 19th century: German, Norwegian, Swedish, Danish, Finnish, Croat, Polish, Russian, Yiddish, Greek, Ukrainian, Spanish, Chinese, Italian, French, Czech, and so on. The first generation kept their native language. The second generation tended to be bilingual, the third generation tended to be monolingual in English. — Bitter Crank
In reverse, an influx of a new language group which belongs to a dominating/dominant culture may cause the native speakers to abandon their language. In South America, many native Amerindian languages were abandoned in favor of Spanish or Portuguese. Probably the same thing happened over time in the British Isles. There was an advantage for non AS speaking people to learn Anglo-Saxon, and eventually lose their own. — Bitter Crank
What really defined the dominant class were the languages of their intellectual ancestors. — apokrisis
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