Come off it, brb! Some of my quips have had you floored! Let’s not embarrass ourselves by pretending otherwise. I haven’t lost any of the old magic.
it means this OLDEST LIVING ENGLISH? The Angles and Saxons brought with them to Britain a language which was the forerunner of modern English and indeed it was the Angles of Denmark that gave England its name – meaning the Angle land. Over the centuries the old Anglo Saxon language changed beyond recognition with the gradual introduction of Latin, Norman-French and other foreign influences. Today the only part of England where the original Anglo-Saxon language has survived to any great extent is of course the North East. Here the old language survives in a number of varieties, the most notable of which are Northumbrian and Geordie. It is from the ancient Germanic and Scandinavian language of the Angles that the unique local dialects of Northumberland and Durham primarily owe their origins.
The independent don't know **** mate, if you take the average geographic and demographic of the UK, 50% of that is bollocks, just some Timothy righting his opinion and saying its FACT.