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Tracing the spread of Celtic languages using ancient genomics

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McColl H   +10 more
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High-resolution genomic ancestry reveals mobility in early medieval Europe

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Speidel L   +8 more
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Lenition in North Sea Germanic

NOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution, 2021
Abstract Lenition, or postvocalic weakening of obstruents, occurred in several languages in North Sea Germanic. Although the main centers of Germanic lenition lie outside this region, in High German and Danish, systemic lenition took place in Low German, North Frisian, and Dutch.
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Level Stress in North Germanic

Journal of Germanic Linguistics, 2008
This article is an investigation of the acoustic properties of the so-called level stress prosody still found in some varieties of North Germanic. Level stress occurs in disyllabic words where a light root syllable has been preserved from Old North Germanic, and is described as having stress more or less evenly distributed across the two syllables.
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The north German organ school

1999
When J. S. Bach applied for the post of organist at the Jakobikirche in Hamburg in 1720 he had hoped to inherit one of the most famous organs in north Germany (see Figure 15.1). Like many of the finest organs of the period it was an instrument that had been enlarged several times over, most recently by the most famous of all north German builders, Arp ...
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North Germanic Dialects

The traditional North Germanic dialects are spoken in the geographical area of Scandinavia, located in the northernmost part of Europe and the North Atlantic area. Linguistically, they form a dialect continuum with similar linguistic characteristics beyond national borders.
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‘North Sea or German Ocean’? The Anglo-German Cartographic Freemasonry, 1842–1914

Imago Mundi, 2009
ABSTRACT From 1842, British and German commercial cartographers established a profitable relationship based on mutual cooperation and the exchange of expertise. The links between the mapmakers of Edinburgh and Gotha, so strong that they amounted to a form of ‘freemasonry’, underpinned the production of many of the key British atlases of the period. The
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German North Sea Tidal Flats

1975
Holocene tidal flats on the southern border of North Sea. Length: 450 km. Width: 5 to 7 km, max. 10 to 15 km. Cross section: wedge-shaped. Intersected by rivers and tidal channels.
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