So only, Spanish and Brythonic of all people retained the Latin word, whereas the rest of Western Europe stuck with the Germanic?
Wiktionary indicates that it may have been a Celtic word borrowed into Latin, which would help explain why the Brythonic languages held onto a variation of it.So only, Spanish and Brythonic of all people retained the Latin word, whereas the rest of Western Europe stuck with the Germanic?
Correct. It's located down at the neck so it was well within the only somewhat rude area.^Is Trondheim actually part of the merely rude, or the snowman rude?
(iirc it is quite to the south of the latter on the map?)
Notice the "omilia" in southern Italy, in the so-called 'Grecia Salentina' regionOmilia means speech (used as a term here as well)
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As in homily, an inspirational saying or practical sermon.
How's "pled" related to "wort" ? Do they have a different origin?
Celtic!quite some words there seem to be rather unrelated (e.g. the 2 different groups within the gaelic languages [or however these are called]).