An unwarranted and ultimately discriminatory snipe, but ok.
Yeah, if a European developer attempted to make a non-European city builder then they'd probably get accused of appropriation, and in addition would also get slammed for the inaccuracies and socio-cultural…
Just carrying on the tradition then I suppose.
>I get that a former penal colony probably has inherited expansive judicial discretion This made me double take. The Thirteen colonies was used as a penal colony too, so maybe the USA has expansive judicial discretion…
It is still a contested topic among linguists, I keep seeing newly published articles about it. The debate's mainly around whether the standard used for Middle English writing is Anglicised Norse versus Norsified Old…
Old English is definitely West Germanic. It's much less clear whether Middle and current English can be considered more West Germanic or more North Germanic; there's still a debate raging on.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no, it depends on the context.
A slice of bread with butter is not a sandwich, it's just bread and butter or buttered bread. Sandwich is a placename, sandy vik, the food item is named after an earl/eoarl/yarl/jarl (take your pick).
Please could you name a few, it should be easy.
An unwarranted and ultimately discriminatory snipe, but ok.
Yeah, if a European developer attempted to make a non-European city builder then they'd probably get accused of appropriation, and in addition would also get slammed for the inaccuracies and socio-cultural…
Just carrying on the tradition then I suppose.
>I get that a former penal colony probably has inherited expansive judicial discretion This made me double take. The Thirteen colonies was used as a penal colony too, so maybe the USA has expansive judicial discretion…
It is still a contested topic among linguists, I keep seeing newly published articles about it. The debate's mainly around whether the standard used for Middle English writing is Anglicised Norse versus Norsified Old…
Old English is definitely West Germanic. It's much less clear whether Middle and current English can be considered more West Germanic or more North Germanic; there's still a debate raging on.
Sometimes yes, sometimes no, it depends on the context.
A slice of bread with butter is not a sandwich, it's just bread and butter or buttered bread. Sandwich is a placename, sandy vik, the food item is named after an earl/eoarl/yarl/jarl (take your pick).
Please could you name a few, it should be easy.