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English has its origins in ancient Germanic roots. But there is more. There was Olde English, Middle English and Modern English. If you heard someone speak in Olde English you would not understand 90 percent of what they said and they would not understand you. We speak Modern English which has evolved from Olde and Middle English.
It means "you ( singular) came, or you arrived."
no, she did not
The English word bazaar came to us in the 1580s from the Italian bazarra, which came from the Persian bazar (Pahlavi vacar), meaning "a market".
The English word champignon, which refers to a particular type of mushroom, is borrowed directly from the French champignon, which happens to mean any mushroom in general, not just one kind.The history of champignon before its usage by the French, however, is disputed.Some say that it originates from the Latin campus "level ground", that became the late Latin campania, which became the Old French champagne "open country". Champignonis presumed to be the diminutive form of champagne, and came to mean a type of mushroom in the English language in the 16th century.Others tie champignon directly to the vulgar Latin word, campinus.
Neoclassicism
The period that came before Impressionism is Realism which was preceded by Romanticism and Neoclassical before that.
The period that came before Impressionism is Realism which was preceded by Romanticism and Neoclassical before that.
Neoclassicism was first seen in the 1780s, Romanticism after 1800.
American came before English and our accent orignated of American
This English word came to us in the 1640s directly from the Latin frequentia.
Yes, Andrew Carnegie was born in Scotland and spoke English fluently before he came to America. He grew up speaking Scottish Gaelic and English.
God made them
The Battle of Yorktown came immediately before Cornwallis surrendered.
Rococo, which is 18th century.
yes
Indians until the English settlers came in to take over and put the tribes on reservations.