Usually they spoke Old French and some Latin.
Yes, American English is considered a dialect of the English language.
Yes, British English is considered a dialect of the English language.
English Dialect Dictionary was created in 1898.
Jamaican English is just an English dialect. Enjoy is the same in any English dialect.
The Middle Ages did not occur in only one country. Each country had its own dialect. Some languages spoken in the Middle Ages were: Medieval Latin Old English Old French Medieval High German Welsh Coptic Tocharian Mongol See the Related Link for more information.
No, "Merican" is not an Anglo-Saxon dialect. It is a colloquial term for "American" used by some individuals. Anglo-Saxon refers to the early medieval period in England and the Old English language spoken during that time.
"Middle English" is a subset of English. Middle English is the type of English spoken in Chaucer's time, as in _The Canterbury Tales_. English is a language as a whole, but over time, the dialect has changed from Old English, the dialect spoken in _Beowulf_, to Middle English, the dialect spoken in Chaucer's time, in _The Canterbury Tales_, to Modern English, the dialect spoken in Shakespeare's time, in _Hamlet_, to today's English, the dialect I'm writing in right now.
Chaucer primarily used the Middle English dialect known as Middle English London, which was spoken in the east midlands region of England during his time. This dialect influenced the development of Modern English.
"Wika" in Cebuano dialect means "language" in English.
All human language is in dialect. Go to New England, in America, to hear a strong local dialect. Or better, go to Scotland, where they speak the Anglic dialect of English, now called Scots, along with the Saxon dialect, now called English.
Yes
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