/celtic/

What do you think about the celtic culture?
Which is your favorite celtic country? I love based Cymru and I'm learning cymraeg.

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I hate south Americans so much

You should speak it with your cousins from Nashville, TN. Not with me (?)

>What do you think about the celtic culture?
It's the best european culture desu. The only one who is not cucked yet.

>Which is your favorite celtic country?
All of them, maybe a little preference for Armorique since It's the only one I visited so far.

Love Celtic culture.

Also, why does an Argentinian guy cares about Celtic kulturr?

>tfw no gaulish culture

It hurts. Romans are feminine faggots, I want a strong and manly culture... :^(

>not cucked yet

lmao, every celtic nation is cucked, even the independent one.

>no gaulish culture
Wh... What? Fronce has a long Celtic history lad.
Where are you from?

Not much of a reason, I just have a friend from Wales.

Yeah, sure they are more cucked than the other european nations. Have a trip in Bretagne friend.

Tours.

Gaulish culture has been eradicated (inb4 some post-1870 propaganda)

Bretagne is awesome. You must visit Rennes. It is THE BEST.

bretons are the very definition of cucks

>muh antifascism!!! fuck the far-right!!!
>muh god bless diversity and tolerance!!!
>g-give independence, France, a free Brittany could almost be a superpower...!!!

They're pathetic losers.

Actually Wales is very important in the Celtic area, they mythically and historically made the first king of England. Also their fucking flag is a dragon.

good post

French culture was gaulish culture, do you think you are italians?

Thanks lad
Well, we don't want independence anymore. We just want P*risians to respect our coutumes and language.

>French culture was gaulish culture

haha, no.

Our culture is latine and we're named after (and used to be ruled by) a germanic tribe.

>Well, we don't want independence anymore. We just want P*risians to respect our coutumes and language.

Well, that's an improvement, I suppose.

Theres nothing latin about france, pre post war france had gaulish culture before being replaced by MCCD and NIGGA NIGGA.

...

>What do you think about the celtic culture?
primitive
>Which is your favorite celtic country?
none

Live Hibernia!

>gaulish culture

No gaulish traditions
No gaulish religion
No gaulish language

A bit rich coming from an anglo.

French traditions is gaulish tradition.

Gaulish culture was 100% Celtic before the Roman invasion...
Then Romans mixed their own culture with the celtic one.

"Gallo-Roman" you know?

What roman culture did france have?
(France is ruins, bad ending in 1945)

Oh please

How is France still celtic?

Romans (and later Franks) totally eradicated our Celtic culture.

We're a celtic people with a latin culture.

>What roman culture did france have?
a big roman influence, of course.
Architecture, science, art, language and shit.

>(France is ruins, bad ending in 1945)
Are you a native english speaker?
anyway, only some cities in the north west of france (normandy) were truly destroyed in the WW2.

French culture was gaulish pre 2nd world war.

>c*lts
youtube.com/watch?v=BNFfDirBE6w

France is ruins we are speaking of something in past tense, on what France was.

Give me some fucking examples, it's like saying American culture is Amerindian.

>some irish = all celts

Are you being stupid on purpose?

kek I actually like the song

Oh ok, It's just my English is shit...
Sorry lad.

No, its like youre saying peruvian or bolivian culture is spaniard.

American culture is anglo/european in general, right?

French people arent Romans, Americans are English.

Never said we were romans.

Also there are more german-americans than english-americans

>There's nothing Latin about France
The major problem with American posters is that you can't never be sure if they're being master baiters or just retarded.

...

Yea, so?

France is solely Gaul.

okay, I'll stop taking the bait

Only real Celts are the Irish.

>third most spoken language in ireland is irish
wew

The word "Celt" didn't even exist until like the 19th century

try 517 BC

>When considered in a narrow genetic sense, the Gaels of Ireland, as identified by the DNA signature of OGAP8, are as close as any group to being considered the root line and forbearers of Celts of today.[18]

jogg.info/31/campbell.htm

What about Scotland, wales and that little bit of France Brittany?

The word from 517 BC just referred to a tribe that lived in Gallia

Massilia is nowhere near Gallia.
Stop pretending you have a clue.

>The first recorded use of the name of Celts – as Κελτοί – to refer to an ethnic group was by Hecataeus of Miletus, the Greek geographer, in 517 BC,[12] when writing about a people living near Massilia (modern Marseille).[13] In the fifth century BC, Herodotus referred to Keltoi living around the head of the Danube and also in the far west of Europe.[14] The etymology of the term Keltoi is unclear. Possible roots include Indo-European *kʲel 'to hide' (present also in Old Irish ceilid), IE *kʲel 'to heat' or *kel 'to impel'.[15] Several authors have supposed it to be Celtic in origin, while others view it as a name coined by Greeks. Linguist Patrizia De Bernardo Stempel falls in the latter group, and suggests the meaning "the tall ones".[16]

Point is the whole thing is a meme that doesn't mean anything, sorry to pop your balloon lad

again, you're pretending to have a clue about things you clearly don't.

Copy-pasting from Wikipedo makes you an expert now does it?
Let me state again. The English word "Celt", with the connotations of constituting a meaningfully consistent cultural, artistic, or linguistic spectrum, dates to the very late modern. The derivation comes from the name (never mind that I wasn't wrong about the tribe in question but let's just grant you the case so you don't have another spanner fit) that ethnographers from over two thousand years into antiquity used to describe a people living in what is today central to southern France. The Greeks in particular clearly distinguished between the "Celts" and other tribes that would in modern terms be called Celtic.
So then what possible use does the word serve, other than in strictly describing a language family? Where does its meaning quotient come from?