As for the gerund, check out this comparison between English, German and Swedish ...
warning - Warnung - varning
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
As for the gerund, check out this comparison between English, German and Swedish ...
warning - Warnung - varning
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
@Anon
The -s ending for plural nouns is actually from Old English, in other words English has always had that.
daeg - day
dagas - days
As for the present/past continuous (I am/was going), well, French doesn't have that.
the dalai lama has apologised after footage showed him asking a boy if he wanted to suck the tibetan spiritual leader's tongue.. .
his office said he wanted to apologise to the child and his family "for the hurt his words may have caused".. .
the video also shows the dalai lama kissing the child on his lips.. soon after the pope alleged peodo activity .
Freaking weirdo.
Check his laptop for child porn.
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
@Scully - you're right English uses to do as an auxiliary verb in a way that most languages don't.
However, French uses est-ce que (literally 'is it that') in exactly the same way, to form questions.
E.g. Est-ce que tu as des freres ou des soeurs? - do you have any brothers or sisters?
It's possible, perhaps even likely, that English was influenced by French in this way.
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
What I think about calling English a hybrid language is this: it's obviously a low-resolution answer to the question.
Start digging, do your research, and it quickly becomes crystal-clear. English is a Germanic language which has a long, glorious history of borrowing from other languages.
Start
Begin
Commence
Initiate
^^^ four words that mean the same, but perhaps with different shades of meaning. Begin is Germanic, commence is from French, initiate is from Latin. I don't know where start comes from.
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
More evidence that English is a Germanic language ...
Let's go back in time a little, to the language of Chaucer and Shakespeare, and compare archaic English with modern English and German.
I have - I have - ich habe
you have - thou hast - du hast
she has - she hath - sie hat
^^^ This clearly isn't borrowed. It shows how English and German started off quite close and have grown apart for various reasons.
Let's go back further, to Old English. English used to have 4 grammatical cases, again just like modern German.
the king - se cyning - der Koenig
to the king - to tham cyning - zu dem (zum) Koenig
^^^ Look at Old English's version of 'the' in the dative case. It ends in -m, just like German.
what is it with disney star wars?
why is it that seemingly everything disney touches turns to shit?
what the f**k are these scooters doing in the book of boba fett?!
Disney's poor choices know no bounds. Apparently, Lizzo features in the latest episode of The Mandelorian.
Lizzo is a fat black woman but I don't know what she's famous for. I'm guessing it's either singing, rapping or twerking her fat ass. Or maybe all three.
RIP Star Wars
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
@Anony Mous
Can you give examples of borrowed grammar?
BTW I agree that there's nothing wrong with hybrid languages, if indeed English is a hybrid language.
I think Jamaican English is a hybrid language - the vocabulary is English and West African languages, the grammar is mostly African languages.
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
what do you think of Icelandic?
Icelandic is a highly conservative language, i.e. it has changed very little over the centuries. This means that it is practically the same language as Old Norse, the language of the Vikings. Icelanders today can read the old sagas with zero training.
Icelandic has kept case endings and the three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter).
The closest living language to Icelandic is Faeroese.
Icelandic, Faeroese and Nynorsk are grouped together as Western North Germanic. Sometimes just Icelandic and Faeroese are considered insular Scandinavian. The two Norwegian standards (Bokmaal and Nynorsk), Danish and Swedish are sometimes considered continental Scandinavian.
the short answer is no, it is not.. i have heard one or two proposals that it is, including from langfocus, a usually excellent youtube channel.. but no, english is actually a germanic language which has borrowed many words from other languages.
here are several reasons why english is germanic at its core .... 1. verb forms.
i play - ich spiele.
Yes, good points.
Also, I only compared English and German, but the more Germanic languages you include, the stronger the case becomes.
For example
man - Mann - man
hand - Hand - hand
finger - Finger - finger
foot - Fuss - fot
house - Haus - hus
hundred - Hundert - hundra
thousand - Tausand - tusen
The third column is Swedish. Pretty much any speaker of any Germanic language can look at that and see something very familiar.