>scotland
>wales
>ireland
>
Scotland
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>might as well call the whole area england
Much of the world does.
Scottish-American here, we don't want anything to do with the bloody engl*sh
hi, england, here's your eternal ally portugal
Actual Scott here please stop
>plastic paddy
wait thats irish, whats the scottish version called?
desu English is just as native to Scotland as it is to England. The lowlands were part of the Angle Kingdom of Northumbria before the Kingdom of England existed.
>Actual Scott here please stop
Actual Scot here. Fuck yourself.
This is a picture of an American Scottish heritage person. I bet he's wearing tartan underwear.
synthetic scot
>This is a picture of an American Scottish heritage person. I bet he's wearing tartan underwear.
>tonight on this episode of "Muh heritage"...
>>tonight on this episode of "Muh heritage"...
Scots is basically meme English.
Actually, according to Wiki, nearly a fifth of Welsh people can speak Welsh. Of course, many of those are probably L2 speakers who butcher the everlasting fuck out of it. But still, the language is far from dead for the time being. Also, an even greater proportion can understand it (33% according to Ethnologue).
>no cornish
shit thread
Fuck off cunt.
Mae lot o bobl yng Nghymru yn siarad Cymraeg.
Mae llawer o bobl yn fuck defaid hefyd, nid yw hynny'n eu gwneud yn ddefaid.
have you forgotten all of your knowledge of Cornish by now?
One of the fastest growing languages in Europe. And, as someone who speaks Welsh (L1), the people who learn are taught to a really high standard. Not like Irish in which L2 speakers basically speak Irish words in English word order.
That's not Scots.
can you vocaroo that?
welsh is visually so very weird
Doethineb.
There isn't many of them.
very good to hear
It always makes me very happy to see people care about their language and/or dialect and invest the effort into making it vibrant and giving it the vivacity it deserves. Way too many languages/dialects are dying out nowadays, and way too many people seem to not care in the slightest about their languages becoming obsolete, it's a tragedy as far as I'm concerned.
You're implying I had a worthwhile level of Cornish to begin with, but not really; I still 'speak' with folk over facebook groups or twitter. And there's a couple weekly podcasts.
It might as well be. It's not like anyone officially writes it anymore
...
Well, I for one was always impressed by your knowledge, everytime someone had a question you seemed to be able to give them answer, which is pretty cool how difficult it is to learn languages which are almost dead.
Just a heritagefag I suppose but do you know if there are any online materials for learning Welsh? Am interested
They're still Celtic culturally
England is a heavy mix of "celtic" and Anglo-Saxon culturally. Sprinkle a bit of Norman and Dane here and there.
>Dane
I forgot about that whole period...they never gave reparations for that
>that flag
AHAHHAHAHAHAHA
send us some port m8
WAE