What language was spoken in the area in which you are currently residing 1500 years ago? What do you know about it...

What language was spoken in the area in which you are currently residing 1500 years ago? What do you know about it?Have you ever tried to learn a bit out of interest?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alemannic_German
youtube.com/watch?v=99-LoEkAA3w
youtube.com/watch?v=iU1ixsGpM1M
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

Nobody knows lmao

Probably somw gay ass Slavic or Avar.

>NZ
>Birdsong according to mainstream historical narrative
Land supposedly uninhabited and Maori didn't arrive en masse until the second half of the last millennium

Latin, I think. The Roman Empire just collapsed at the time
I studied it for 5 years in high school so I know it pretty well. I could translate some pretty advanced texts at the time but my Latin now is probably a bit rusty

Old English, Cumbric, and Scottish Gaelic.

are you implying it's false?

Koine Greek which I understand most of it

Timucua
Nothing
There isn't enough to learn because there was no linguistic science at the time of spanish conquest, they were only able to record the sounds of a few words

Latin probably

World in 500 CE

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No. I believe it. Some people believe otherwise but there is zero archaeological evidence. Last time I posted about it, I had some faggot sperging out about Mori Ori and Lemuria

Thanks ese

I think it was Greek

They spoke Alemannic. Still the same.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alemannic_German

it's called koine

version for non-ants

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>The city was destroyed in the 447 invasion of the Huns and the city laid in ruins for a century. It was rebuilt by Byzantine Emperor Justinian I. During the reign of Justinian it flourished, being surrounded with great fortress walls whose remnants can still be seen today.
It was still inhabited obviously. The residents were probably speaking Greek. Slavs were invading around those times, so probably some of them. Dunno about Latin; Sofia is on a major trade and military road so it obviously had various people living there, probably some Latin-speaking community as well.

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Latin, mostly. Possibly Gothic, P-Celtic and Illyrian, too.

Latin I think. Maybe Greek? Some say Punic was still being spoken.

probably either Culi or Patagona
Culi was a language spoken exclusively in the Cajamarca region (it became the de facto language of the Cuismanco kingdom), and Patagona was a Jivaroan language, some say it was Cariban, from the "ceja de selva" (Amazon/Andes transition zone) of the northern area of the Cajamarca region

went extinct

Norwegian, of course.

Vulgar Latin mixed with some proto-Germanic language.

Swahili

no idea
some slav maybe

Oʼodham

Who knows, old tehuelchian or something

ooga booga

In the 5th Century it would have been Old English

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youtube.com/watch?v=99-LoEkAA3w

>distinct drop in quality after 1066
huh, strange...

india has several languages but the oldest Indo-European language is sanskrit and oldest dravidian language is Tamil

Some kind of Algonquin language. Maybe Potawatomie.

DIEU ET MON DROIT
how much of the old english can you understand?

*clicks and whistles*

Some weird indio language.
No, I never bothered with it.

probably some native language. because of our lack of knowledge, i can't guess accurately. i can't even find a straight answer as to who lived where i live right now during periods of european colonization, because if i'm reading correctly, all of the tribes were migratory as fuck and moved frequently between here and other parts of my state + canada.

Wappo

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Some Algonquian language.
The most recent one was Lenape.

Old Javanese probably

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Makushi and probably Arawak
I'm learning other languages but I have friends who know a little
There's really not much interest outside of indigenous communities for learning them and I don't live near any so

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Edmonton
Most likely a old form of a proto-Dene language. Blackfoot was added kind of recently to the area around 1000 AD,
So maybe like a proto-central Algonquian language maybe. although, it's a long shot

Chibcha or Música IIRC.I really don't know the exact name of the language the previous inhabitants of this region so back then

Jersey?

Allentown, PA

This. The languages of the majority of native people here got BTFO by Spaniards and Catholics. Feels bad not being able to have some sort of linguistic attachment with natives and some ancestors desu

Coast Miwok

youtube.com/watch?v=iU1ixsGpM1M
We don't have enough information about the language to learn it.