fingallian造句
例句与造句
- The short extract below provides a good example of Fingallian.
- Although little is known of Fingallian, it is thought to have been similar to the Forth and Bargy dialect of County Wexford.
- Part of the humour for the Anglo-Irish readers of the poem is that Nees and Dydy converse with each other in broad Fingallian.
- Fingallian was spoken in the region of Fingal, traditionally the part of County Dublin north of the River Tolka, and now a separate county.
- Linguist Alf Sommerfelt proposed the idea of a Norse influence on the Fingallian dialect, though later scholars have found no evidence of such a connection.
- It's difficult to find fingallian in a sentence. 用fingallian造句挺难的
- The surviving literature of Fingallian consists of two satirical or humorous poems, the short " Fingallian Dance " and the much longer " Purgatorium Hibernicum ".
- The surviving literature of Fingallian consists of two satirical or humorous poems, the short " Fingallian Dance " and the much longer " Purgatorium Hibernicum ".
- Virgil's prince Aeneas and his noble lover Dido are transformed into a bumbling young Fingallian called'Prince'Nees and a coarse ex-nun Dydy.
- Both poems are anonymous and are thought to be humorous parodies of Fingallian by non-native speakers, so their value from a linguistic point of view may be limited.
- In Ireland, various forms of English have been spoken since the Forth and Bargy and Fingallian developed as offshoots from Early Middle English, and were spoken until the 19th century.
- A few features need explanation :'V'is used instead of'W'in Fingallian;'suggam'is a kind of straw rope'; Ful dea ro is derives from Irish " fuil D? a rogha "'God's blood, my sweetheart ':