Paris is a multicultural shit hole.

About 40% of the population of Ireland speaks Gaelic.
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And within the EU the Irish are the only English speakers. When Ireland not likes to speak English any longer then English will no longer be an official language of the EU - and so it will be the first official EU language which could die out. The fate of the English language in the EU is in the hands of Ireland. Ireland could use Irish (Gaelic). For Bregrets sake little GB had to write in this case their messages to the EU in one of this languages:

  • 1958: Dutch, French, German, Italian

  • 1973: Danish, English

  • 1981: Greek

  • 1986: Portuguese, Spanish

  • 1995: Finnish, Swedish

  • 2004: Czech, Estonian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Maltese, Polish, Slovak, Slovenian

  • 2007: Bulgarian, Irish, Romanian

  • 2013: Croatian


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Modern German only comes from the older Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family itself.

What means "only" in this context?




What is "only German" is for example that we use the female grammatical gender for the sun and the male grammatical gender for the moon. So you had to replace for example in "The canticle of the sun" written from Saint Francis "brother sun and sister moon" with "sister sun and brother moon".

As far as I know we are the only culture in Europe - or even in the whole world - who is doing so. So the highest god in the German history (the sun always represents a highest god) had once been a godess in the German culture. But no one knows anything about any longer. This godess was for sure also important in the English culture (which is also a German culture) - but you overtook fully the Scandinavian and/or Latin elements when you forgot this tradition. We also had done so and we would know nothing about if we had not this "strange" phenomenon in our language which shows very clear our common roots had had also a very very old matriarchal structure.

Around Paris lived once by the way many Celtic "kings" who indeed had been queens. "City of love" is perhaps a much older expression for the area around Paris as we think it is. Whatever - I'm happy that "Notre Dame" was rebuilded. I think this is a protective shield not only for Paris but for whole Europe. I remember in this context what was said about Adolf Hitler after Paris was conquered. It is said he liked to destroy Paris completely. But in a night where he took a look over Paris he decided not to do so. No one knows why - but everyone who thinks about is very happy that this never had happened. Still we live in an Europe full of hope.
 
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