I French And German

I French And German




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https://www.fluentu.com/blog/french/french-and-german
Deutsche Welle (German Wave), or DW, is a top German-owned international news source, and if you’re learning German and French at the same time, you should absolutely have it bookmarked. Not only can you use the site to read international news in French (at the link above), but you can also read in German , along with 29 other languages.
https://ielanguages.com/frenchgerman.html
Learn Spanish, French, German, Italian, Mandarin Chinese and English with authentic videos by Yabla that include subtitles and translations. Learn to read languages with …
A German Attempting To Speak French | Get Germanized
French and German leaders pay tribute to World War One fallen
Should I learn French or German? Is french or german easier to learn? French vs German Language.
https://blog.23andme.com/ancestry-reports/what-is-french-german-ancestry
06.02.2020 · French & German ancestry doesn’t only reflect ancestry from France or Germany. It also represents ancestry from one of the predominantly French or Germanic- speaking countries of Europe, including: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, and Switzerland.
Pronunciation. Vowels in French and German are pure, so make sure not to add an extra yuh or wuh sound that is common in English, i.e. say ee, not ee-yuh. French has 12 vowels and German …
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/French–German_enmity
French–German (Franco-German) enmity (French: Rivalité franco-allemande, German: Deutsch–französische Erbfeindschaft) was the idea of unavoidably hostile relations and mutual revanchism between Germans (including Austrians) and French …
https://anthrogenica.com/showthread.php?12400-French-and-German
24.10.2017 · I read somewhere that 23andMe only assigns “French and German” 8% of the time when it is present. On paper my mother is French Canadian for 300 years so primarily has relatives from France and my father is Belgian for 300 years. In theory I should receive a high “French and German…
https://blog.busuu.com/german-or-french
Choosing between making French or German the next language you learn? In this article, we give you 5 things you should think about to help you decide.
https://www.linguee.com/english-german/translation/french+german.html
The network offers comprehensive, subject-specific information and consulting services, such as (1) a comprehensive German-French online database, (2) cross-border advice for …
https://www.quora.com/Are-the-French-a-Germanic-people
* The French are a very mixed people, both genetically and culturally with most sharing a common language only as of the 20th Century. From prehistoric times, well before France (or Gaul) even existed, the area that is now France …
https://history.stackexchange.com/questions/28999
25.05.2016 · French descent from Latin, German descent from ancient Germanic languages. There is many German loanwords from French and vice-versa, and the loanwords rate tends to incease when you come close to linguistic border: In Switzerland Swiss-Germans uses a LOT of French words, and we French speakers uses a few German …
РекламаСтрептокарпусы польской и российской селекции. Доставка по России.
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February 6, 2020 By 23andMe under Ancestry Reports
Five short stories about the genetic history of Western Europe — from the Celts to Charlemagne.
French & German ancestry doesn’t only reflect ancestry from France or Germany. It also represents ancestry from one of the predominantly French or Germanic- speaking countries of Europe, including: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, and Switzerland.
Near the dawn of European written history, Greek scholars recorded the existence of the Keltoi, or Celts — advanced Iron Age tribes with roots near the headwaters of the Rhine and Danube rivers in the Alps. 
In the 19th century, finely wrought gold, bronze, and iron artifacts from an early Celtic society were discovered in the Austrian Alps, hinting at wealth and a facility with metalworking that may have aided in the rapid expansion of the Celts across Europe.
By the 3rd century BCE, there were Celtic-speaking peoples from the British Isles to the Black Sea. 
So, you probably inherited some Celtic-like DNA even if your family never lived in the British Isles, but it’s old…really old.
After fending off frequent attacks from the Celtic tribes of Gaul (the heart of which is now France and Belgium), Julius Caesar and his Roman legions decided to remove this Celtic threat for good. 
In 58 BCE, Roman troops led by Caesar began a series of devastating military campaigns to subjugate the Celtic tribes and secure the western bank of the Rhine River—a natural barrier against the restless Germanic tribes to the east. By 51 BCE, Gaul fell to Caesar.
Over the next 500 years, Latin became the lingua franca in Gaul, and Celtic languages found refuge along the Atlantic fringe of Europe. 
Despite this massive cultural shift, genetic evidence suggests the Romans from Rome didn’t leave much DNA behind in Gaul. 
Ever heard of “Francia”? The “Frankish Kingdom”? The “Franks”? 
Frankly, it’s fine if you haven’t, but you might have a genetic connection to them.
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 CE, the Franks — a federation of Germanic tribes led by Clovis I — wrested control of Gaul from the Romans and Visigoths, marking the founding of Francia (the Frankish Kingdom) and the beginning of the Merovingian Dynasty. 
Germanic-speaking precursors to the Franks and other Germanic tribes are thought to have originated in southern Scandinavia over 3,000 years ago, expanding further and further south into formerly Celtic and Roman territory. Recent studies found evidence that the widespread migrations of Germanic peoples between the 4th and 6th centuries (called the “The Migration Period”) had a more significant impact on northwestern and Central Europe’s DNA than did the expansion of the Roman Empire. 
23andMe’s “French & German” ancestry falls roughly within the historical bounds of The Frankish Kingdom — Francia — as it existed in the early 9th century under Charlemagne.
• There are around 1 million 23andMe customers whose majority ancestry is “French & German,” and over 5 million customers with at least 1% of this genetic heritage.
• Today, while “French & German” ancestry is common throughout central and western Europe, it reaches particularly high levels near the Upper Rhine River where France, Germany, and Switzerland meet.
• “French & German” ancestry is highest among 23andMe customers from Switzerland, averaging around 64%.
The authors of a recent study estimated that every European who lived over 1,000 years ago — and left descendants — is very likely the ancestor of every ethnically European person alive today. And Charlemagne, King of the Franks, was particularly prolific, siring around 20 children.
If you go far enough back in time, your pedigree is actually “collapsing” in on itself over and over again, with many of your ancestors showing up on multiple branches of your family tree.
So, if you have European ancestry, you’re probably descended from Charlemagne. 
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