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And I'm a bit worried about the possibility of not being aware that I
may have started speaking Frenglish.<br>
(Academic hedging there!)<br>
Carmela Chateau<br>
(formerly known as Smith)<br>
<blockquote cite="mids407fe92.073@FSGWHUB.usna.edu" type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Not to mention "Dunglish" and "Denglish" (Dutch and German respectively).
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.dunglish.nl/">http://www.dunglish.nl/</a>
Bill
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<pre wrap="">Nicholas Sanders <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:nick@semiotek.org"><nick@semiotek.org></a> 03/03/06 7:19 AM >>>
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<pre wrap=""><!---->Although probably not qualified to do so, I presume to identify a
dialect known as Danglish.
Nick
On 3 Mar 2006, at 11:06, Adam Kilgarriff wrote:
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<pre wrap="">I'd say Brussels English is a bona fide dialect, but "Standard
European
English" or "ELF" are maybe too loosely defined to have much by way of
distinctive characteristics.
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<pre wrap=""><!---->
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