by Ash » Thu Aug 16, 2007 8:12 am
You're absolutely right on the suffix/prefix point. But I still see it as an imported structure and not as a pure English structure.
While I'm perfectly willing to believe your numbers for the origin of words, I think it's pretty clear that in common speech, most of the words we use in English are from Germanic origin. In Dutch you can choose to use Latin words too, but you won't use them as often as Germanic words. In English it's more common to use Latin-based words, but I would still wager that most of the words in common speech are Germanic based.
And I'm not very used to English vocabulary for languages, so correct me if I'm wrong, but an indefinite article is 'a' (a tree) right? Latin doesn't use indefinite articles, only 'pointing articles' (hic/here, ipse/self etc.).
The influence of Latin on the modern English is big, that's for sure. But the roots of modern English are still in Germanic language, as far as I think.
"Rationality, that was it. No esoteric mumbo jumbo could fool that fellow. Lord, no! His two feet were planted solidly on God's good earth" - Ellery Queen, The Lamp of God