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Cornish language

Index Cornish language

Cornish (Kernowek) is a revived language that became extinct as a first language in the late 18th century. [1]

758 relations: A Richer Vein, AberFest, Adverb, Agan Tavas, Akademi Kernewek, Alamannia, Alba, Albion, Alternative Christmas message, Alternative theories of the Hungarian language relations, An Awhesyth, An Gof, Ancient Celtic women, Andrew Boorde, Andrew Climo, Andrew George (politician), Andrewartha, Angarrack, Angevin Empire, Anglo-Celtic Australians, Anglo-Cornish, Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Angove, Angwin, Ankou, Aphex Twin, Armorica, Art (given name), Arthur Champernowne, Article (grammar), Arwenack, August 1901, Avalon, Avena nuda, Awen, Baden Teague, Bal maiden, Balcombe, Baldhu, Baragwanath, Bardic name, Battle of Deorham, BBC Radio Cornwall, Beaglehole, Berepper, Bernard Deacon, Bert Biscoe, Beunans Meriasek, Bewnans Ke, Bible translations into Cornish, ..., Bilingual education, Blue John (mineral), Bodmin, Bodmin manumissions, Bodrifty, Boduel, Bogeyman, Boscawen-Un, Bossence (surname), Boswednack, Bouldnor, Bourne (stream), Brenda Wootton, Breton language, Breton mutations, Bretons, Brett Harvey (English director), British English, British Isles, British Latin, British literature, British people, British–Irish Council, Brittany, Brittany (administrative region), Brittonic languages, Bro Goth agan Tasow, Brownqueen Tunnel, Brut y Brenhinedd, Brychan, Bucca (mythological creature), Burncoose, Cadgwith, Cairn, Camborne, Camborne School of Mines, Camborne, Ontario, Cantabrian labarum, Cara (given name), Carew, Carn, Carn Brea, Redruth, Carn Euny, Carnyorth, Celliwig, Celtic Britons, Celtic calendar, Celtic Congress, Celtic language decline in England, Celtic languages, Celtic League, Celtic literature, Celtic Media Festival, Celtic nations, Celtic Revival, Celtic rock, Celtic studies, Celtic toponymy, Celticisation, Celts, Celts (modern), Celts in Transylvania, Ch (digraph), Charlestown Rowing Club, Chenoweth, Chesten Marchant, Chigwell School, Christianity in Cornwall, Christmas card, Christopher, Chynoweth, Chysauster Ancient Village, Civil parishes in Cornwall, Close front rounded vowel, CNX, Coco (folklore), Cognate, Colloquial Welsh morphology, Common Brittonic, Compton, Wolverhampton, Conan Meriadoc, Consonant mutation, Constitutional status of Cornwall, Continental Celtic languages, Cooch, Cor, Cornish, Cornish Americans, Cornish Assembly, Cornish Australians, Cornish Canadians, Cornish cuisine, Cornish currency, Cornish diaspora, Cornish festivals, Cornish grammar, Cornish heraldry, Cornish hurling, Cornish language numbers, Cornish Language Partnership, Cornish language revival, Cornish literature, Cornish mythology, Cornish nationalism, Cornish people, Cornish rebellion of 1497, Cornish Solidarity, Cornish surnames, Cornouaille, Cornovii (Cornwall), Cornwall, Cornwall Council, Cornwall Film Festival, Corpus Christi (Syven album), Corum Jhaelen Irsei, Cox (surname), Cranken Rhyme, Crantock, Crempog, Cribbar, CRN, Crowdy-crawn, Crows-an-Wra, Cuckoo wrasse, Cultural relationship between the Welsh and the English, Culture of Cornwall, Culture of England, Culture of France, Culture of the United Kingdom, Cumbrian dialect, Cumbrian toponymy, Cumbric, Cussel an Tavas Kernuak, Cybi, Daines Barrington, Dalla, Dalleth, Dan Rogerson, David (name), Delabole, Delkiow Sivy, Delyow Derow, Demographics of Europe, Demography of England, Demography of the United Kingdom, Diacritic, Diphthong, Dolcoath mine, Dolly Pentreath, Dolmen, Don Cherry, Douarnenez, Dover, Druid, Drukqs, Dubrovnik, Dumnonia, Dumnonii, E. G. Retallack Hooper, Earl, Early Cornish texts, Edmund Bonner, Edmund Henry Hambly, Edward Hain, Edward Lhuyd, Edwin Norris, Eeny, meeny, miny, moe, Eisteddfod, Elections in Great Britain, Elizabeth I of England, Ellery (surname), Emmet (Cornish), Endangered language, England, English Channel, English drama, English language in England, English literature, English people, English Place-Name Society, English Shinty Association, English-medium education, Englyn, Ethnic groups in Europe, Etymology of Aberdeen, Euan, Europe, European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, Ewan, Ewen, Excalibur, Ȳ, Falmouth Docks, Falmouth, Cornwall, Federation of Old Cornwall Societies, Finistère, Fionn mac Cumhaill, Fishing in Cornwall, Fishmonger, Fistral Beach, Flora and fauna of Cornwall, Folk music of England, Foma (software), Fossicking, Fred W. P. Jago, Frig (interjection), Fry (surname), Gaelic type, Geography of Cornwall, Geography of Scotland in the Middle Ages, Georg Sauerwein, Germanic peoples, Gevrik, Gilbert Hunter Doble, Glasney College, Glastonbury Tor, Glossary of names for the British, Goat cheese, Godolphin and Latymer School, Godolphin School, Goff, Goldsworthy (name), Golowan Festival, Gorsedd, Gorsedh Kernow, Graham Sandercock, Great Britain, Guinevere, Gwavas, Gweek, Gwennap, Gwennap Head, Gwenno Saunders, Hagiography, Haldreyn, Hamoaze, Hayle Kimbro Pool, Helen Rule, Helena Sanders, Hen Ogledd, Henry Boase, Henry Dangar, Henry Jenner, Henry Jenner (bishop), Herman the Recluse, History of Brittany, History of Cornwall, History of France, History of Plymouth, History of the Welsh language, Hogan (surname), House of Tudor, Hundreds of Cornwall, Hwerow Hweg, Ince Castle, Index of Cornwall-related articles, Index of language articles, Index of United Kingdom-related articles, Indo-European languages, Indo-European studies, Indo-European vocabulary, Inflected preposition, Insular Celtic languages, Insular Celts, Isles of Scilly, ISO 639:c, ISO 639:o, ISO/IEC 8859-14, It's a Long Way to Tipperary, Iwan (name), Jabberwocky, Jack Kerouac, Jack the Giant Killer, Jacob (name), Jago (name), James (name), James Jenkins (Cornish scholar), Jennifer (given name), Jesus (name), John (given name), John Bolitho, John Boson (writer), John Davey (Cornish speaker), John Hobson Mathews, John Kennall, John of Cornwall (grammarian), John Trevisa, John Whitaker (historian), Joseph Bédier, Joseph Hunkin (bishop), Julyan Holmes, Justin (name), Kehillat Kernow, Kelly (surname), Kelly's of Cornwall, Ken George, Kenneggy Downs, Kernewek Kemmyn, Kernewek Lowender, Kernowek Standard, Kerris, Kescusulyans Kernow (Conference of Cornwall), Kesva an Taves Kernewek, Killas, Kingdom of England, Kingdom of Great Britain, Kingdom of Strathclyde, Kinship Terms: A Numerical Variation, Knockentiber, Knocker (folklore), Korrigan, Kowethas an Yeth Kernewek, Kresen Kernow, Kw, L. C. R. Duncombe-Jewell, Language and the euro, Language death, Language revitalization, Languages of Cornwall, Languages of Europe, Languages of the European Union, Languages of the United Kingdom, Languages of the United States, Languages of Wales, Lanner, Cornwall, Lanyon (Madron), Last speaker of the Cornish language, Le Kov, Legends of the Fall, Lelant, Lescudjack Hill Fort, Lesnewth, Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature, Liet International, Linkinhorne, Lisa Simpson, Liss, List of acronyms: C, List of acronyms: K, List of adjectivals and demonyms for subcontinental regions, List of Anglo-Cornish words, List of Arthurian characters, List of Celtic-language media, List of contemporary ethnic groups, List of Cornish writers, List of countries and dependencies and their capitals in native languages, List of countries by spoken languages, List of country-name etymologies, List of destroyed libraries, List of endangered languages in Europe, List of English words of Brittonic origin, List of English words of Welsh origin, List of French words of Gaulish origin, List of generic forms in place names in Ireland and the United Kingdom, List of Indo-European languages, List of ISO 639-1 codes, List of ISO 639-2 codes, List of Jewish ethnonyms, List of language names, List of language regulators, List of languages by first written accounts, List of languages by time of extinction, List of languages by type of grammatical genders, List of languages by writing system, List of last known speakers of languages, List of Latin-script alphabets, List of Latin-script digraphs, List of linguists, List of multilingual countries and regions, List of numbers in various languages, List of official languages by country and territory, List of people from Cardiff, List of places in Cornwall, List of redundant place names, List of revived languages, List of river name etymologies, List of television channels in Celtic languages, List of United Kingdom county name etymologies, List of Wikipedias, Literary Welsh morphology, Literature in the other languages of Britain, Lizard (village), Llangadwaladr, Powys, Loch, Logan Rock, Longevity myths, Longships, Looe, Lostwithiel, Louis Lucien Bonaparte, Loveday Carlyon, Loveday Jenkin, Ludgvan, Lugh, Lundy, Lusty Glaze, Lyonesse, Madron, Maker, Cornwall, Manx language, Maponos, Margaret Steuart Pollard, Mark of Cornwall, Mary Woodvine, Mên Scryfa, Mên-an-Tol, Mebyon Kernow, Media in Cornwall, Mediæval Bæbes, Medium of instruction, Melor, Meriadoc, Meriasek, Merrow, Mevagissey, Michael Everson, Michael Praed, Mick Paynter, Minack Theatre, Mining in Cornwall and Devon, Minority language, Minority language broadcasting, Modern Cornish, Montol Festival, Mordred, Morgawr (folklore), Mount's Bay, Mousehole, Movyans Skolyow Meythrin, Multinational state, Mundic, Music of Cornwall, MV RMS Mulheim, Myrddin Wyllt, Mystery play, Name of Greece, Names of Easter, Names of Germany, Names of the days of the week, Nancledra, Nanpean, National Library of Wales, Nemain, Newlyn, News, Nicholas Boson, Nicholas Williams, Nigel Haywood, Nigel Pengelly, Nine Maidens stone row, Norse activity in the British Isles, Oath of Allegiance (United Kingdom), OCO, Ofis Publik ar Brezhoneg, Ogo-dour Cove, Old English phonology, Ordinalia, Outline of Cornwall, Outline of the United Kingdom, Pan Celtic Festival, Pan-Celticism, Parish Church of St Mary and St Petroc, Paschal greeting, Pasco (name), Pascoe, Pascon agan Arluth, Pasty, Paul (given name), Paul, Cornwall, Paul-Louis Rossi, Paynter, Púca, Pedn Vounder, Pelynt, Pendarvis (Mineral Point, Wisconsin), Pendoggett, Pendour Cove, Penix, Penrose, Cornwall, Penryn, Penryn College (South Africa), Penwith, Penzance, Penzance railway station, Per Vari Kerloc'h, Percuil River, Perranporth, Peter (given name), Peter Berresford Ellis, Peter Birt, Peter Mundy, Petrosomatoglyph, Pictish language, Pixie, Place name origins, Plain-an-Gwarry, Plas, Plen-an-gwary, Poldhu, Polgigga, Polperro, Polruan, Porbeagle, Port Quin, Porthcurno, Porthtowan, Portuguese vocabulary, Prayer Book Rebellion, Pre-stopped consonant, Prideaux Castle, Probus, Cornwall, Promontory fort, Prophecy of Merlin, Proposed top-level domain, Proto-Celtic language, Proto-Indo-European language, Proto-Indo-European particles, Proto-Slavic borrowings, Pseudoarchaeology of Cornwall, Q, Quethiock, Radio St Austell Bay, Radyo an Gernewegva, Ralph Dunstan, Reeth, Regional language, Restormel, Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament, Rhisiart Tal-e-bot, Richard, Richard Gendall, Richard Jenkin, Richard Rufus of Cornwall, Richard Rutt, Riddle drum, Ringfort, River Camel, River Fal, River Fowey, River Glen, Lincolnshire, River Lerryn, River Parrett, River Plym, River Severn, Robert Morton Nance, Robert Walling, Rock-cut basin, Rocking stone, Rod Lyon, Roman Britain, Rootschat, Rooz (album), Rosedinnick, Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, Rugby union in Cornwall, Saale, Saint Kea, Saint Mungo, Saint Piran, Saint Teilo, Sarah Newton, Saxons, Scantlebury, Scotland in the Early Middle Ages, Scotland in the Middle Ages, Scott Mann (politician), Scottish island names, Seaton, Cornwall, Seth Lakeman, Sir James Smith's School, Sirona, Skol Veythrin Karenza, Smith (surname), Source FM, Souterrain, South Australian English, South Hams, South West England, Southwestern Brittonic languages, Speaker types, Sperris Quoit, Spot (franchise), Springside, Ayrshire, St Agnes, Cornwall, St Breock Downs Monolith, St Bridget's Church, Morvah, St Buryan, St Columb Major, St Just in Penwith, St Levan, St Mary's, Isles of Scilly, St Mellion International Resort, St Michael's Mount, St Pol de Léon's Church, Paul, St Senara's Church, Zennor, St Uny's Church, Lelant, Stan Palk, Standard Written Form, Stannary, Stargazy pie, Stateless nation, Stephen Bosustow, Stevyn Colgan, Street, Somerset, Sumorsaete, Sun dog, Sweet Nightingale, Talkin, Talkin Tarn, Talskiddy, Tarvos Trigaranus, T–V distinction, Tehidy, Terminology of the British Isles, Tesyn, The Brome play of Abraham and Isaac, The Carracks, The House on the Strand, The Hurlers (stone circles), The Merry Maidens, The Protectorate, The Song of the Western Men, Thomas Boson, Thomson and Thompson, Tim Saunders, Timeline of Cornish history, Timeline of the English Reformation, Tin, Toast (honor), Todpool, Tom Bawcock, Toponymy of England, Torpoint, Towednack, Tradition, Translations of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Translations of The Hobbit, Translations of Through the Looking-Glass, Tre, Pol and Pen, Treen Cove, Tremain, Tremaine, Tremar Coombe, Tremayne, Tresillian, Tresillian House, St Newlyn East, Trethowan, Trevarno, Cornwall, Trevarno, Livermore, California, Trevescan, Trevorrow, Trewartha, Tristan, Troyl, Truro, Turned A, Unified Cornish, United Kingdom, Veor Cove, Verb–subject–object, Veryan, Vocative case, Voiceless dental fricative, Voiceless labialized velar approximant, Vortigern, Vug, W, Wales, Walkers are Welcome, Welsh Language Board, Welsh toponymy, West Country English, Western Brittonic languages, Western Europe, Wharf, Wheal, White British, White Island, Isles of Scilly, White people, Whitley Stokes, Wild West (TV series), Wilfred Bennetto, Will Coleman (storyteller), William Borlase, William Golding, William Gwavas, William Jordan (writer), William Pryce, William Scawen, William Watkin Edward Wynne, Withiel, Withielgoose, Wrasse, Y, Y Dydd Olaf (album), Y Gododdin, Yan Tan Tethera, Yogh, Zennor, 14th century in literature, 1504 in literature, 1540s in England, 1676 in England, 1676 in literature, 16th century in literature, 1741 in literature, 1777, 1777 in Great Britain. Expand index (708 more) »

A Richer Vein

A Richer Vein is the debut album by Cornish folk band Dalla.

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AberFest

AberFest is a Celtic cultural festival celebrating all things Cornish and Breton that takes place every second year in Cornwall, UK, around Easter.

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Adverb

An adverb is a word that modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, noun phrase, clause, or sentence.

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Agan Tavas

Agan Tavas (Our Language) is a society which exists to promote the Cornish language and is represented on the Cornish Language Partnership.

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Akademi Kernewek

Akademi Kernewek (Cornish language academy) is the official academic body responsible for the linguistic development of the Cornish language It is responsible for setting standards for the language, developing dictionaries in the Standard Written Form, advising on street and place names, developing terminology and carrying out research.

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Alamannia

Alamannia or Alemannia was the territory inhabited by the Germanic Alemanni after they broke through the Roman limes in 213 CE.

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Alba

Alba is the Scottish Gaelic name for Scotland.

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Albion

Albion (Ἀλβιών) is the oldest known name of the island of Great Britain.

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Alternative Christmas message

The alternative Christmas message is a message broadcast by Channel 4 since 1993, as a sometimes humorous and sometimes serious alternative to the Royal Christmas Message of Queen Elizabeth II.

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Alternative theories of the Hungarian language relations

Current linguistic theory suggests that the Hungarian language belongs to the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic language family.

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An Awhesyth

An Awhesyth, Cornish (Kernewek) for "The Lark", is a traditional Cornish folk song.

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An Gof

An Gof was a militant Cornish nationalist group suspected of a series of attacks in the 1980s.

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Ancient Celtic women

The position of ancient Celtic women in their society cannot be surely determined due to the quality of the sources.

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Andrew Boorde

Andrew Boorde (or Borde) (c. 1490April 1549) was an English traveller, physician and writer.

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Andrew Climo

Andrew Climo (born 1961) is a Cornwall-based, Cornish author and community activist.

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Andrew George (politician)

Andrew Henry George (born 2 December 1958) is a British Liberal Democrat politician.

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Andrewartha

Andrewartha and Trewartha are Cornish family names.

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Angarrack

Angarrack (An Garrek) is a village, in west Cornwall, England, UK.

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Angevin Empire

The Angevin Empire (L'Empire Plantagenêt) is a collective exonym referring to the possessions of the Angevin kings of England, who also held lands in France, during the 12th and 13th centuries.

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Anglo-Celtic Australians

Anglo-Celtic Australians are Australians whose ancestors originate wholly or partially in the countries of England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland.

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Anglo-Cornish

Anglo-Cornish (also known as Cornish English, Cornu-English, or Cornish dialect) is a dialect of English spoken in Cornwall by Cornish people.

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Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain

The Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain describes the process which changed the language and culture of most of what became England from Romano-British to Germanic.

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Angove

Angove is an Cornish surname.

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Angwin

Angwin is a Cornish language surname that means ('the white') and may refer to.

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Ankou

Ankou (Breton: an Ankoù) is a personification of death in Breton mythology as well as in Cornish (an Ankow in Cornish), Welsh (yr Angau in Welsh) and Norman French folklore.

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Aphex Twin

Richard David James (born 18 August 1971), best known by his main alias Aphex Twin, is an Irish-born Cornish electronic musician best known for his influential and idiosyncratic work in styles such as ambient techno and IDM during the 1990s.

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Armorica

Armorica or Aremorica is the name given in ancient times to the part of Gaul between the Seine and the Loire that includes the Brittany Peninsula, extending inland to an indeterminate point and down the Atlantic Coast.

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Art (given name)

Art is a Celtic masculine given name, meaning "bear", thus figuratively "champion".

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Arthur Champernowne

Sir Arthur Champernowne (c.1524, in S. T. Bindoff (ed.), The History Of Parliament: The House Of Commons 1509–1558. Available from: History of Parliament Online. (Access: 29 August 2014). – 29 March 1578) was an English politician, high sheriff and soldier who lived at Dartington Hall in Devon, England.

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Article (grammar)

An article (with the linguistic glossing abbreviation) is a word that is used with a noun (as a standalone word or a prefix or suffix) to specify grammatical definiteness of the noun, and in some languages extending to volume or numerical scope.

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Arwenack

Arwenack, historically in the parish of St Budock, Cornwall, is a historic manor on the site of what is today the town of Falmouth.

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August 1901

The following events occurred in August 1901.

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Avalon

Avalon (Insula Avallonis, Old French Avalon, Ynys Afallon, Ynys Afallach; literally meaning "the isle of fruit trees") is a legendary island featured in the Arthurian legend.

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Avena nuda

Avena nuda (hulless oat, naked oat) is a species of grass with edible seeds in the oat genus Avena.

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Awen

Awen is a Welsh, Cornish and Breton word for "(poetic) inspiration".

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Baden Teague

Baden Chapman Teague (born 18 September 1944) served as a Liberal Senator for South Australia from 1977 until his retirement in 1996.

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Bal maiden

A bal maiden, from the Cornish language bal, a mine, and the English "maiden", a young or unmarried woman, was a female manual labourer working in the mining industries of Cornwall and western Devon, at the south-western extremity of Great Britain.

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Balcombe

Balcombe is a village and civil parish in the Mid Sussex district of West Sussex, England.

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Baldhu

Baldhu (Bal Du, meaning black mine) is a village and parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Baragwanath

Baragwanath is a Cornish language surname originating in west Cornwall in the UK.

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Bardic name

A bardic name is a pseudonym used in Wales, Cornwall or Brittany by poets and other artists, especially those involved in the eisteddfod movement.

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Battle of Deorham

The Battle of Deorham (or Dyrham) was a decisive military encounter between the West Saxons and the Britons of the West Country in 577.

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BBC Radio Cornwall

BBC Radio Cornwall is the BBC Local Radio service for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly in the United Kingdom.

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Beaglehole

Beaglehole or Beauglehole is a Cornish surname.

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Berepper

Berepper is a coastal village in south Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Bernard Deacon

Bernard W. Deacon is a multidisciplinary academic, based at the Institute of Cornish Studies of the University of Exeter at the Tremough Campus.

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Bert Biscoe

Bert Biscoe is a bard of the Cornish Gorseth also known by the bardic name Viajor Gans Geryow.

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Beunans Meriasek

Beunans Meriasek (English: The Life of Saint Meriasek) is a Cornish play completed in 1504.

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Bewnans Ke

Bewnans Ke (The Life of Saint Ke) is a Middle Cornish play on the life of Saint Kea or Ke, who was venerated in Cornwall, Brittany and elsewhere.

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Bible translations into Cornish

Translations of parts of the Bible into Cornish have existed since the 17th century.

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Bilingual education

Bilingual education involves teaching academic content in two languages, in a native and secondary language with varying amounts of each language used in accordance with the program model.Bilingual education refers to the utilization of two languages as means of instruction for students and considered part of or the entire school curriculum.

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Blue John (mineral)

Blue John (also known as Derbyshire Spar) is a semi-precious mineral, a form of fluorite with bands of a purple-blue or yellowish colour.

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Bodmin

Bodmin (Bosvena) is a civil parish and historic town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Bodmin manumissions

The Bodmin manumissions are records included in a manuscript Gospel book, the Bodmin Gospels or St Petroc Gospels, British Library, Additional MS 9381.

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Bodrifty

Bodrifty is the modern name of an Iron Age village, now in ruins, in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Boduel

Boduel is a hamlet in east Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Bogeyman

Bogeyman (usually spelled boogeyman in the U.S.; also spelled bogieman or boogie man; see American and British English spelling differences) is a common allusion to a mythical creature in many cultures used by adults to frighten children into good behaviour.

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Boscawen-Un

Boscawen-Un is a Bronze Age stone circle close to St Buryan in Cornwall, UK.

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Bossence (surname)

Bossence is a surname of Cornish origin.

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Boswednack

Boswednack is a hamlet in the parish of Zennor near the north coast of the Penwith peninsula in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Bouldnor

Bouldnor is a hamlet near Yarmouth on the west coast of the Isle of Wight in southern England.

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Bourne (stream)

A bourne is an intermittent stream, flowing from a spring.

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Brenda Wootton

Brenda Wootton (née Ellery) (10 February 1928 – 11 March 1994) was a Cornish poet and folk singer and was seen as an ambassador for Cornish tradition and culture in all the Celtic nations and as far as Australia and Canada.

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Breton language

Breton (brezhoneg or in Morbihan) is a Southwestern Brittonic Celtic language spoken in Brittany.

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Breton mutations

Like all modern Celtic languages, Breton is characterised by initial consonant mutations, which are changes to the initial sound of a word caused by certain syntactic or morphological environments.

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Bretons

The Bretons (Bretoned) are a Celtic ethnic group located in the region of Brittany in France.

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Brett Harvey (English director)

Brett Harvey is a film writer and director based in Cornwall.

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British English

British English is the standard dialect of English language as spoken and written in the United Kingdom.

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British Isles

The British Isles are a group of islands off the north-western coast of continental Europe that consist of the islands of Great Britain, Ireland, the Isle of Man and over six thousand smaller isles.

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British Latin

British Latin or British Vulgar Latin was the Vulgar Latin spoken in Great Britain in the Roman and sub-Roman periods.

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British literature

British literature is literature in the English language from the United Kingdom, Isle of Man, and Channel Islands.

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British people

The British people, or the Britons, are the citizens of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the British Overseas Territories, and the Crown dependencies.

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British–Irish Council

The British–Irish Council (BIC) is an intergovernmental organisation that aims to improve collaboration between its members in a number of areas including transport, the environment, and energy.

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Brittany

Brittany (Bretagne; Breizh, pronounced or; Gallo: Bertaèyn, pronounced) is a cultural region in the northwest of France, covering the western part of what was known as Armorica during the period of Roman occupation.

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Brittany (administrative region)

Brittany (Breizh, Bretagne) is one of the 18 regions of France.

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Brittonic languages

The Brittonic, Brythonic or British Celtic languages (ieithoedd Brythonaidd/Prydeinig; yethow brythonek/predennek; yezhoù predenek) form one of the two branches of the Insular Celtic language family; the other is Goidelic.

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Bro Goth agan Tasow

Bro Goth agan Tasow ("Old Land of our Fathers") is one of the anthems of Cornwall, UK sung in the Cornish language.

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Brownqueen Tunnel

Brownqueen Tunnel, also called Brown Queen Tunnel, is a railway tunnel on the Cornish Main Line between and stations in Cornwall, England.

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Brut y Brenhinedd

Brut y Brenhinedd ("Chronicle of the Kings") is a collection of variant Middle Welsh versions of Geoffrey of Monmouth's Latin Historia Regum Britanniae.

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Brychan

Brychan Brycheiniog was a legendary 5th-century king of Brycheiniog (Brecknockshire, alternatively Breconshire) in South Wales.

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Bucca (mythological creature)

Bucca is a male sea-spirit in Cornish folklore - a merman- that inhabited mines and coastal communities as a hobgoblin during storms.

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Burncoose

Burncoose is a hamlet near Gwennap in west Cornwall, England; Burncoose lies on the A393 road, south-east of Redruth.

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Cadgwith

Cadgwith (Porthkajwydh, meaning cove of the thicket) is a village and fishing port in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Cairn

A cairn is a human-made pile (or stack) of stones.

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Camborne

Camborne (Kammbronn) is a town in west Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Camborne School of Mines

The Camborne School of Mines (Cornish: Scoll Balow Cambron), commonly abbreviated to CSM, was founded in 1888.

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Camborne, Ontario

Camborne is a community in Hamilton Township, Northumberland County, Ontario, Canada.

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Cantabrian labarum

The Cantabrian labarum (Cantabrian: lábaru cántabru or lábaro cántabro) is a modern interpretation of the ancient military standard known by the Romans as Cantabrum.

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Cara (given name)

Kara is a female given name of Latin or Celtic origin.

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Carew

Carew is a Welsh language and Cornish Language habitation type surname; it has also been used as a synonym for the Irish patronymic Ó Corráin.

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Carn

Carn is the official magazine of the Celtic League.

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Carn Brea, Redruth

Carn Brea (Karnbre) is a civil parish and hilltop site in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Carn Euny

Carn Euny (from Karn Uni):. Cornish Language Partnership.

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Carnyorth

Carnyorth (Cornish: Karnyorgh) is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Celliwig

Celliwig, Kelliwic or Gelliwic is perhaps the earliest named location for the court of King Arthur.

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Celtic Britons

The Britons, also known as Celtic Britons or Ancient Britons, were Celtic people who inhabited Great Britain from the British Iron Age into the Middle Ages, at which point their culture and language diverged into the modern Welsh, Cornish and Bretons (among others).

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Celtic calendar

The Celtic calendar is a compilation of pre-Christian Celtic systems of timekeeping, including the Gaulish Coligny calendar, used by Celtic countries to define the beginning and length of the day, the week, the month, the seasons, quarter days, and festivals.

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Celtic Congress

The International Celtic Congress (Ar C'hendalc'h Keltiek, An Guntelles Keltek, Yn Cohaglym Celtiagh, A' Chòmhdhail Cheilteach, An Chomhdháil Cheilteach, Y Gyngres Geltaidd) is a cultural organisation that seeks to promote the Celtic languages of Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall and the Isle of Man.

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Celtic language decline in England

Celtic language-death in England refers primarily to the process by which speakers of Brittonic languages in what is now England switched to speaking English.

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Celtic languages

The Celtic languages are a group of related languages descended from Proto-Celtic, or "Common Celtic"; a branch of the greater Indo-European language family.

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Celtic League

The Celtic League is a pan-Celtic organisation, founded in 1961, that aims to promote modern Celtic identity and culture in Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Brittany, Cornwall and the Isle of Man – referred to as the Celtic nations; it places particular emphasis on promoting the Celtic languages of those nations.

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Celtic literature

In the strictly academic context of Celtic studies, the term Celtic literature is used by Celticists to denote any number of bodies of literature written in a Celtic language, encompassing the Irish, Welsh, Cornish, Manx, Scottish Gaelic and Breton languages in either their modern or earlier forms.

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Celtic Media Festival

The Celtic Media Festival, formerly known as the Celtic Film and Television Festival, aims to promote the languages and cultures of the Celtic nations in film, on television, radio and new media.

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Celtic nations

The Celtic nations are territories in western Europe where Celtic languages or cultural traits have survived.

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Celtic Revival

The Celtic Revival (also referred to as the Celtic Twilight or Celtomania) was a variety of movements and trends in the 19th and 20th centuries that saw a renewed interest in aspects of Celtic culture.

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Celtic rock

Celtic rock is a genre of folk rock, as well as a form of Celtic fusion which incorporates Celtic music, instrumentation and themes into a rock music context.

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Celtic studies

Celtic studies or Celtology is the academic discipline occupied with the study of any sort of cultural output relating to the Celtic people.

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Celtic toponymy

Celtic toponymy is the study of place names wholly or partially of Celtic origin.

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Celticisation

Celticisation, or Celticization, was historically the process of conquering and assimilating by the ancient Celts.

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Celts

The Celts (see pronunciation of ''Celt'' for different usages) were an Indo-European people in Iron Age and Medieval Europe who spoke Celtic languages and had cultural similarities, although the relationship between ethnic, linguistic and cultural factors in the Celtic world remains uncertain and controversial.

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Celts (modern)

The modern Celts (see pronunciation of ''Celt'') are a related group of ethnicities who share similar Celtic languages, cultures and artistic histories, and who live in or descend from one of the regions on the western extremities of Europe populated by the Celts.

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Celts in Transylvania

The appearance of Celts in Transylvania can be traced to the later La Tène period (c. 4th century BC).

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Ch (digraph)

Ch is a digraph in the Latin script.

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Charlestown Rowing Club

Charlestown Rowing Club is a Cornish Pilot Gig Rowing club in the town of Charlestown in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Chenoweth

Chenoweth is a name of Cornish origin meaning "new house" (Chy noweth) in the Cornish language.

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Chesten Marchant

Chesten Marchant or Cheston Marchant, who died in 1676 at Gwithian, Cornwall, reportedly having reached the age of 164 (the claim apparently going back to either William Scawen or, according to Henry Jenner, to William Borlase), is believed to have been the last monoglot Cornish speaker, as opposed to other speakers such as Dolly Pentreath who could also speak English.

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Chigwell School

Chigwell School is a co-educational day and boarding independent school in Chigwell, in the Epping Forest district of Essex, England.

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Christianity in Cornwall

Christianity in Cornwall (Kristonedh yn Kernow) began in the 4th or 5th century AD when Western Christianity was introduced into Cornwall along with the rest of Roman Britain.

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Christmas card

A Christmas card is a greeting card sent as part of the traditional celebration of Christmas in order to convey between people a range of sentiments related to the Christmas and holiday season.

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Christopher

Christopher is the English version of a Europe-wide name derived from the Greek name Χριστόφορος (Christóforos).

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Chynoweth

Chynoweth is a name of Cornish origin meaning "new house" (Chy noweth) in the Cornish language.

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Chysauster Ancient Village

Chysauster Ancient Village is a late Iron Age and Romano-British village of courtyard houses in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, which is currently in the care of English Heritage.

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Civil parishes in Cornwall

A civil parish is a country subdivision, forming the lowest unit of local government in England.

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Close front rounded vowel

The close front rounded vowel, or high front rounded vowel, is a type of vowel sound, used in some spoken languages.

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CNX

CNX may refer to.

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Coco (folklore)

The Coco (or Cuco, Coca, Cuca, Cucuy, Cucuí) is a mythical ghost-monster, equivalent to the bogeyman, found in many Latino and Lusophone countries.

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Cognate

In linguistics, cognates are words that have a common etymological origin.

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Colloquial Welsh morphology

The morphology of the Welsh language has many characteristics likely to be unfamiliar to speakers of English or continental European languages like French or German, but has much in common with the other modern Insular Celtic languages: Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Manx, Cornish, and Breton.

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Common Brittonic

Common Brittonic was an ancient Celtic language spoken in Britain.

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Compton, Wolverhampton

Compton is a suburb of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, England.

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Conan Meriadoc

Conan Meriadoc is a legendary British leader credited with founding Brittany.

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Consonant mutation

Consonant mutation is change in a consonant in a word according to its morphological or syntactic environment.

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Constitutional status of Cornwall

Cornwall is an administrative county of England.

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Continental Celtic languages

The Continental Celtic languages are the Celtic languages, now extinct, that were spoken on the continent of Europe, as distinguished from the Insular Celtic languages of the British Isles and Brittany.

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Cooch

Cooch can refer to.

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Cor

Cor or COR may refer to.

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Cornish

Cornish is the adjective and demonym associated with Cornwall, the most southwesterly part of the United Kingdom.

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Cornish Americans

Cornish Americans (Cornish: Amerikanek kernewek) are Americans who describe themselves as having Cornish ancestry, an ethnic group native to Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Cornish Assembly

A Cornish Assembly (Senedh Kernow) is a proposed devolved law-making assembly for Cornwall along the lines of the Scottish Parliament, the National Assembly for Wales and the Northern Ireland Assembly in the United Kingdom.

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Cornish Australians

Cornish Australians are citizens of Australia who are fully or partially of Cornish heritage or descent, an ethnic group native to Cornwall in the United Kingdom.

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Cornish Canadians

Cornish Canadians are Canadians of Cornish descent, including those who were born in Cornwall.

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Cornish cuisine

Cornish cuisine encompasses the cooking styles, traditions and recipes associated with Cornwall and the Cornish people.

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Cornish currency

Currency, in the form of coins, has been issued in Cornwall periodically since at least the 10th century AD, while banknotes were issued into the 19th century.

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Cornish diaspora

The Cornish diaspora consists of Cornish people and their descendants who emigrated from Cornwall, Britain.

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Cornish festivals

The cultural calendar of Cornwall is punctuated by numerous historic and community festivals and celebrations.

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Cornish grammar

Cornish grammar is the grammar of the Cornish language (Kernowek), an insular Celtic language closely related to Breton and Welsh and, to a lesser extent, to Irish, Manx and Scottish Gaelic.

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Cornish heraldry

Cornish heraldry is the form of coats of arms and other heraldic bearings and insignia used in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Cornish hurling

Hurling or Hurling the Silver Ball (Hurlian), is an outdoor team game played only in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Cornish language numbers

In the counting system used in the Cornish language the numbers below 100 are based on twenties: so numbers from 21–39 are "x on twenty", 41–59 are "x on two twenty", numbers from 61–79 are "x on three twenty", and numbers from 81–99 are "x on four twenty".

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Cornish Language Partnership

The Cornish Language Partnership (Keskowethyans an Taves Kernewek) is a representative body that was set up in Cornwall, England, UK in 2005 to promote and develop the use of the Cornish language.

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Cornish language revival

The Cornish language revival (lit) is an ongoing process to revive the use of the Cornish language of Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Cornish literature

Cornish literature refers to written works in the Cornish language.

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Cornish mythology

Cornish mythology is the folk tradition and mythology of the Cornish people.

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Cornish nationalism

Cornish nationalism is a cultural, political and social movement that seeks the recognition of Cornwall – the south-westernmost part of the island of Great Britain – as a nation distinct from England.

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Cornish people

The Cornish people or Cornish (Kernowyon) are an ethnic group native to, or associated with Cornwall: and a recognised national minority in the United Kingdom, which can trace its roots to the ancient Britons who inhabited southern and central Great Britain before the Roman conquest.

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Cornish rebellion of 1497

The Cornish rebellion of 1497 (Cornish: Rebellyans Kernow) was a popular uprising by the people of Cornwall.

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Cornish Solidarity

Cornish Solidarity (Unvereth Kernewek in Cornish) was a Cornish organisation founded in February 1998.

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Cornish surnames

Cornish surnames are surnames used by Cornish people and often derived from the Cornish language such as Jago, Trelawney or Enys.

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Cornouaille

Cornouaille (Kernev or Kerne) is a historic region of Brittany in northwestern France.

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Cornovii (Cornwall)

The Cornovii is a hypothetical name for a tribe who would have been part of the Dumnonii, a Celtic tribe inhabiting the South West peninsula of Great Britain, during some part of the Iron Age, Roman and post-Roman periods.

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Cornwall

Cornwall (Kernow) is a county in South West England in the United Kingdom.

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Cornwall Council

Cornwall Council (Konsel Kernow) is the unitary authority for the county of Cornwall in the United Kingdom, not including the Isles of Scilly, which has its own council.

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Cornwall Film Festival

The Cornwall Film Festival (Cornish: Gool fylm Kernow) is an annual festival started in 2001 which focuses on Cornish film making, offering local and national premieres, and hosts masterclasses, workshops and discussions for everyone from the enthusiast to the professional.

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Corpus Christi (Syven album)

Corpus Christi is the second full-length album by the Finnish ambient, neofolk, and metal band Syven.

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Corum Jhaelen Irsei

Corum Jhaelen Irsei ("the Prince in the Scarlet Robe") is the name of a fictional fantasy hero in a series of two trilogies written by author Michael Moorcock.

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Cox (surname)

The surname Cox is of English or Welsh origin, and may have originated independently in several places in Great Britain, with the variations arriving at a standard spelling only later.

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Cranken Rhyme

The "Cranken Rhyme" is a Cornish-language song known by farmer John Davey or Davy (1812–1891), who was one of the last people with some knowledge of the tongue.

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Crantock

Crantock (Lanngorrow) is a coastal civil parish and a village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Crempog

Crempog (plural: crempogau) is a Welsh pancake made with flour, buttermilk, eggs, vinegar and salted butter.

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Cribbar

The Cribbar (Cornish - kribow: reefs), also known as the Widow Maker, is a reef off the Towan Headland in Newquay, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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CRN

CRN may refer to.

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Crowdy-crawn

A crowdy-crawn is a wooden hoop covered with sheepskin used as a percussion instrument in western Cornwall at least as early as 1880.

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Crows-an-Wra

Crows-an-Wra (Krows an Wragh, meaning the witch's cross) is a hamlet in West Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Cuckoo wrasse

The cuckoo wrasse (Labrus mixtus) is a species of wrasse native to the eastern Atlantic Ocean from Norway to Senegal, including the Azores and Madeira.

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Cultural relationship between the Welsh and the English

The relationship between the Welsh and English is characterised largely by tolerance of people and cultures.

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Culture of Cornwall

The culture of Cornwall (Gonisogeth Kernow) forms part of the culture of the United Kingdom, but has distinct customs, traditions and peculiarities.

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Culture of England

The culture of England is defined by the idiosyncratic cultural norms of England and the English people.

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Culture of France

The culture of Paris,in France and of the French people has been shaped by geography, by profound historical events, and by foreign and internal forces and groups.

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Culture of the United Kingdom

The culture of the United Kingdom is influenced by the UK's history as a developed state, a liberal democracy and a great power; its predominantly Christian religious life; and its composition of four countries—England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland—each of which has distinct customs, cultures and symbolism.

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Cumbrian dialect

The Cumbrian dialect is a local Northern English dialect in decline, spoken in Cumbria (including historic Cumberland and Westmorland) and surrounding northern England, not to be confused with the area's extinct Celtic language, Cumbric.

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Cumbrian toponymy

Cumbrian toponymy refers to the study of place names in Cumbria, a county in North West England, and as a result of the spread of the ancient Cumbric language, further parts of northern England and the Southern Uplands of Scotland.

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Cumbric

Cumbric was a variety of the Common Brittonic language spoken during the Early Middle Ages in the Hen Ogledd or "Old North" in what is now Northern England and southern Lowland Scotland.

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Cussel an Tavas Kernuak

Cussel an Tavas Kernuak (Cornish Language Council) is an organisation promoting the revival of the Cornish language, in Cornwall, England, UK, and is represented on the Cornish Language Partnership.

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Cybi

Saint Cybi (in Welsh) or Saint Cuby (in Cornish) was a 6th-century Cornish bishop, saint and, briefly, king, who worked largely in North Wales: his biography is recorded in two slightly variant medieval 'lives'.

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Daines Barrington

Daines Barrington, FRS, FSA (1727/2814 March 1800) was an English lawyer, antiquary and naturalist.

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Dalla

Dalla is a band specialising in traditional Cornish music, known for their festival and concert performances as well as providing music (until recently) for Noze looan dances.

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Dalleth

Dalleth (beginning) was a support organisation for parents and families bringing up children to speak Cornish.

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Dan Rogerson

Daniel John Rogerson (born 23 July 1975, St Austell) is a British Liberal Democrat politician.

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David (name)

David is a common masculine given name of Biblical Hebrew origin, as King David is a character of central importance in the Hebrew Bible and in Christian, Jewish and Islamic religious tradition.

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Delabole

Delabole (Delyow Boll) is a large village in north Cornwall, England, UK.

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Delkiow Sivy

Delkiow Sivy ("Strawberry Leaves" in Cornish (Kernewek)) is a Cornish folk song.

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Delyow Derow

Delyow Derow (Cornish: Oak Leaves) was a literary magazine in Cornish, published from 1988 to 1996 by former Grand Bard of Gorseth Kernow Richard Jenkin.

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Demographics of Europe

Figures for the population of Europe vary according to how one defines the boundaries of Europe.

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Demography of England

The demography of England has since 1801 been measured by the decennial national census, and is marked by centuries of population growth and urbanisation.

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Demography of the United Kingdom

According to the 2011 census, the total population of the United Kingdom was around 63,182,000.

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Diacritic

A diacritic – also diacritical mark, diacritical point, diacritical sign, or an accent – is a glyph added to a letter, or basic glyph.

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Diphthong

A diphthong (or; from Greek: δίφθογγος, diphthongos, literally "two sounds" or "two tones"), also known as a gliding vowel, is a combination of two adjacent vowel sounds within the same syllable.

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Dolcoath mine

Dolcoath mine (Bal Dorkoth was a copper and tin mine in Camborne, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. Its name derives from the Cornish for 'Old Ground', and it was also affectionately known as The Queen of Cornish Mines. The site is north-west of Carn Brea. Dolcoath Road runs between the A3047 road and Chapel Hill. The site is south of this road.

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Dolly Pentreath

Dorothy Pentreath (16 May 1692 – 26 December 1777), known as Dolly, was a speaker of the Cornish language.

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Dolmen

A dolmen is a type of single-chamber megalithic tomb, usually consisting of two or more vertical megaliths supporting a large flat horizontal capstone or "table".

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Don Cherry

Donald Stewart Cherry (born February 5, 1934) is a Canadian ice hockey commentator.

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Douarnenez

Douarnenez,, is a commune in the Finistère department of Brittany in north-western France.

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Dover

Dover is a town and major ferry port in the home county of Kent, in South East England.

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Druid

A druid (derwydd; druí; draoidh) was a member of the high-ranking professional class in ancient Celtic cultures.

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Drukqs

Drukqs (stylised as drukQs) is the fifth studio album by Aphex Twin, a pseudonym used by English electronic musician Richard D. James.

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Dubrovnik

Dubrovnik (historically Ragusa) is a Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea.

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Dumnonia

Dumnonia is the Latinised name for the Brythonic kingdom in Sub-Roman Britain between the late 4th and late 8th centuries, in what is now the more westerly parts of South West England.

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Dumnonii

The Dumnonii or Dumnones were a British tribe who inhabited Dumnonia, the area now known as Devon and Cornwall (and some areas of present-day Dorset and Somerset) in the further parts of the South West peninsula of Britain, from at least the Iron Age up to the early Saxon period.

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E. G. Retallack Hooper

Ernest George Retallack Hooper (1906–1998) was a Cornish writer and journalist from St Agnes, Cornwall who became the third Grand Bard of the Gorseth Kernow in 1959 to 1964.

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Earl

An earl is a member of the nobility.

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Early Cornish texts

Specimens of Middle Cornish texts are given here in Cornish and English.

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Edmund Bonner

Edmund Bonner (also Boner; c. 1500 – 5 September 1569) was Bishop of London from 1539–49 and again from 1553-59.

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Edmund Henry Hambly

Dr Edmund Henry Tregothwyn Hambly MRCS; FRCS; MB BS; LRCP (24 March 1914 – 9 March 1985), was a British orthopaedic surgeon, Labour Party and Liberal Party politician and a supporter of the preservation of the Cornish language.

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Edward Hain

Sir Edward Hain (December 1851 – 20 September 1917) was a leading shipping owner in Cornwall, England, and a politician who represented St Ives as a Liberal Unionist from 1900 to 1904, and as a Liberal from 1904 to 1906.

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Edward Lhuyd

Edward Lhuyd (occasionally written as Llwyd in recent times, in accordance with Modern Welsh orthography) (1660 – 30 June 1709) was a Welsh naturalist, botanist, linguist, geographer and antiquary.

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Edwin Norris

Edwin Norris (24 October 1795 – 10 December 1872) was a British philologist, linguist and intrepid orientalist who wrote or compiled numerous works on the languages of Asia and Africa; his best-known works are his uncompleted Assyrian Dictionary and his translation and annotation of the three plays of the Cornish Ordinalia.

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Eeny, meeny, miny, moe

"Eeny, meeny, miny, moe" — which can be spelled a number of ways — is a children's counting rhyme, used to select a person in games such as tag.

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Eisteddfod

In Welsh culture, an eisteddfod (plural eisteddfodau) is a Welsh festival of literature, music and performance.

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Elections in Great Britain

Elections in the Kingdom of Great Britain were principally general elections and by-elections to the House of Commons of Great Britain.

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Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I (7 September 1533 – 24 March 1603) was Queen of England and Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death on 24 March 1603.

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Ellery (surname)

Ellery is a surname, and may refer to: People.

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Emmet (Cornish)

Emmet (alt spellings emmit or emit) is a pejorative nickname that some Cornish people use to refer to the non-Cornish.

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Endangered language

An endangered language, or moribund language, is a language that is at risk of falling out of use as its speakers die out or shift to speaking another language.

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England

England is a country that is part of the United Kingdom.

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English Channel

The English Channel (la Manche, "The Sleeve"; Ärmelkanal, "Sleeve Channel"; Mor Breizh, "Sea of Brittany"; Mor Bretannek, "Sea of Brittany"), also called simply the Channel, is the body of water that separates southern England from northern France and links the southern part of the North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean.

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English drama

Drama was introduced to England from Europe by the Romans, and auditoriums were constructed across the country for this purpose.

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English language in England

The English language spoken and written in England encompasses a diverse range of accents and dialects.

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English literature

This article is focused on English-language literature rather than the literature of England, so that it includes writers from Scotland, Wales, and the whole of Ireland, as well as literature in English from countries of the former British Empire, including the United States.

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English people

The English are a nation and an ethnic group native to England who speak the English language. The English identity is of early medieval origin, when they were known in Old English as the Angelcynn ("family of the Angles"). Their ethnonym is derived from the Angles, one of the Germanic peoples who migrated to Great Britain around the 5th century AD. England is one of the countries of the United Kingdom, and the majority of people living there are British citizens. Historically, the English population is descended from several peoples the earlier Celtic Britons (or Brythons) and the Germanic tribes that settled in Britain following the withdrawal of the Romans, including Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians. Collectively known as the Anglo-Saxons, they founded what was to become England (from the Old English Englaland) along with the later Danes, Anglo-Normans and other groups. In the Acts of Union 1707, the Kingdom of England was succeeded by the Kingdom of Great Britain. Over the years, English customs and identity have become fairly closely aligned with British customs and identity in general. Today many English people have recent forebears from other parts of the United Kingdom, while some are also descended from more recent immigrants from other European countries and from the Commonwealth. The English people are the source of the English language, the Westminster system, the common law system and numerous major sports such as cricket, football, rugby union, rugby league and tennis. These and other English cultural characteristics have spread worldwide, in part as a result of the former British Empire.

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English Place-Name Society

The English Place-Name Society (EPNS) is a learned society concerned with toponomastics and the toponymy of England, in other words, the study of place-names (toponyms).

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English Shinty Association

The English Shinty Association (ESA) is the main body for promoting and encouraging the sport of shinty in England.

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English-medium education

An English-medium education system is one that uses English as the primary medium of instruction—particularly where English is not the mother tongue of the students.

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Englyn

Englyn (plural englynion) is a traditional Welsh and Cornish short poem form.

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Ethnic groups in Europe

The Indigenous peoples of Europe are the focus of European ethnology, the field of anthropology related to the various indigenous groups that reside in the nations of Europe.

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Etymology of Aberdeen

The Etymology of Aberdeen (which is the meaning / origin of the word) is that of the name first used for the city of Aberdeen, Scotland.

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Euan

Euan is a Scottish, male given name, most common throughout the United Kingdom and Canada, due to the influence of Scots in both nations.

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Europe

Europe is a continent located entirely in the Northern Hemisphere and mostly in the Eastern Hemisphere.

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European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages

The European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (ECRML) is a European treaty (CETS 148) adopted in 1992 under the auspices of the Council of Europe to protect and promote historical regional and minority languages in Europe.

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Ewan

Ewan is a Scottish, male given name, most common throughout the United Kingdom and Canada, due to the influence of Scots in both nations.

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Ewen

Ewen is a male given name, most common throughout Scotland and Canada, due to the influence of Scots in that country.

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Excalibur

Excalibur, or Caliburn, is the legendary sword of King Arthur, sometimes also attributed with magical powers or associated with the rightful sovereignty of Britain.

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Ȳ

Ȳ (minuscule: ȳ) is a letter of the Latin alphabet, formed from Y with the addition of a macron (¯).

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Falmouth Docks

Falmouth Docks are a deep-water docks of the town of Falmouth in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Falmouth, Cornwall

Falmouth (Aberfala) is a town, civil parish and port on the River Fal on the south coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Federation of Old Cornwall Societies

The Federation of Old Cornwall Societies (FOCS) was formed in 1924, on the initiative of Robert Morton Nance, with the objective of collecting and maintaining "all those ancient things that make the spirit of Cornwall — its traditions, its old words and ways, and what remains to it of its Celtic language and nationality".

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Finistère

Finistère (Penn-ar-Bed) is a department of France in the extreme west of Brittany.

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Fionn mac Cumhaill

Fionn mac Cumhaill (Old and Find or Finn mac Cumail or Umaill, sometimes transcribed in English as MacCool or MacCoul) was a mythical hunter-warrior of Irish mythology, occurring also in the mythologies of Scotland and the Isle of Man.

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Fishing in Cornwall

Fishing in Cornwall, England, UK, has traditionally been one of the main elements of the economy of the county.

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Fishmonger

A fishmonger (fishwife for female practitioners - "wife" in this case used in its archaic meaning of "woman") is someone who sells raw fish and seafood.

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Fistral Beach

Fistral Beach is in Fistral Bay (Porth an Vystel, meaning cove of the foul water) on the north coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Flora and fauna of Cornwall

Cornwall is the county that forms the tip of the southwestern peninsula of England; this area has a mild and warm climate regulated by the Gulf Stream.

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Folk music of England

The folk music of England is tradition-based music, which has existed since the later medieval period.

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Foma (software)

Foma is a free and open source finite-state toolkit created and maintained by Mans Hulden.

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Fossicking

In Australia, New Zealand and Cornwall, fossicking is prospecting, especially when carried out as a recreational activity.

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Fred W. P. Jago

Frederick William Pearce Jago (fl. 1838–1892) was a scholar best known for his work The Ancient Language and the Dialect of Cornwall, originally published 1882 by Netherton and Worth of Truro.

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Frig (interjection)

Frig is an interjection in the English language that expresses contempt.

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Fry (surname)

Fry is an English, Cornish, and Welsh surname.

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Gaelic type

Gaelic type (sometimes called Irish character, Irish type, or Gaelic script) is a family of insular typefaces devised for printing Classical Gaelic.

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Geography of Cornwall

The geography of Cornwall describes the extreme southwestern peninsula of England west of the River Tamar.

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Geography of Scotland in the Middle Ages

The geography of Scotland in the Middle Ages covers all aspects of the land that is now Scotland, including physical and human, between the departure of the Romans in the early fifth century from what are now the southern borders of the country, to the adoption of the major aspects of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century.

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Georg Sauerwein

Georg Julius Justus Sauerwein (15 January 1831 in Hanover – 16 December 1904 in Christiania (now Oslo) was a German publisher, polyglot, poet, and linguist. He is buried at Gronau. Sauerwein was the greatest linguistic prodigy of his time and mastered about 75 languages.

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Germanic peoples

The Germanic peoples (also called Teutonic, Suebian, or Gothic in older literature) are an Indo-European ethno-linguistic group of Northern European origin.

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Gevrik

Gevrik is a soft, full-fat goat's milk cheese produced in Trevarrian near Newquay on the north Cornish coast, in southwest England.

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Gilbert Hunter Doble

Gilbert Hunter Doble (26 November 1880 – 15 April 1945) was an Anglican priest and Cornish historian and hagiographer.

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Glasney College

Glasney College (Kolji Glasneth) was founded in 1265 at Penryn, Cornwall, England, by Bishop Bronescombe and was a centre of ecclesiastical power in medieval Cornwall and probably the best known and most important of Cornwall's religious institutions.

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Glastonbury Tor

Glastonbury Tor is a hill near Glastonbury in the English county of Somerset, topped by the roofless St Michael's Tower, a Grade I listed building.

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Glossary of names for the British

Alternative names for people from the United Kingdom include nicknames and terms, including affectionate ones, neutral ones, and derogatory ones to describe British people, and more specifically English, Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish people.

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Goat cheese

Goat cheese, goats' cheese, or chèvre (or; from the French word for goat), is cheese made from goat's milk.

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Godolphin and Latymer School

The Godolphin and Latymer School is an independent day school for girls in Hammersmith, West London.

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Godolphin School

The Godolphin School is an independent boarding school for girls at Salisbury in Wiltshire, England, founded in 1726.

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Goff

Goff is a surname with several distinct origins.

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Goldsworthy (name)

Goldsworthy is a Cornish name, from the Cornish language "gol-erewy", meaning field of feast.

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Golowan Festival

Golowan (sometimes also Goluan or Gol-Jowan) is the Cornish language word for the Midsummer celebrations in Cornwall, UK: widespread prior to the late 19th century and most popular in the Penwith area and in particular Penzance and Newlyn.

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Gorsedd

A gorsedd plural gorseddau, is a community or meeting of modern-day bards.

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Gorsedh Kernow

Gorsedh Kernow (Cornish Gorsedd) is a non-political Cornish organisation, based in Cornwall, United Kingdom, which exists to maintain the national Celtic spirit of Cornwall.

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Graham Sandercock

Graham Sandercock is an author, journalist and former teacher living in Cornwall, England, UK, who once stood for the UK parliamentary seat of South East Cornwall.

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Great Britain

Great Britain, also known as Britain, is a large island in the north Atlantic Ocean off the northwest coast of continental Europe.

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Guinevere

Guinevere (Gwenhwyfar; Gwenivar), often written as Guenevere or Gwenevere, is the wife of King Arthur in Arthurian legend.

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Gwavas

Gwavas is a residential council estate on the southern outskirts of the town of Newlyn in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Gweek

Gweek (Gwig, meaning forest village) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Gwennap

Gwennap (Pluwwenep, meaning "the Parish of Wenappa") is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Gwennap Head

Gwennap Head (Toll Pedn Pennwydh, meaning holed head of Penwith) is a headland on the south coast of the Penwith peninsula, Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Gwenno Saunders

Gwenno Mererid Saunders (born 23 May 1981) is a Welsh musician, known by the stage name Gwenno.

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Hagiography

A hagiography is a biography of a saint or an ecclesiastical leader.

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Haldreyn

Haldreyn is the bardic name of William Morris (born 1937).

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Hamoaze

The Hamoaze is an estuarine stretch of the tidal River Tamar, between its confluence with the River Lynher and Plymouth Sound, England.

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Hayle Kimbro Pool

Hayle Kimbro Pool (Cornish: Hal Kembro, meaning "Welshman's marsh") is a wetland on The Lizard, Cornwall.

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Helen Rule

Helen Rule is a British actress based in Cornwall, UK.

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Helena Sanders

Helena Sanders née Charles (April 16, 1911– June 14, 1997), was a Cornish humanitarian, cultural activist, politician and poet.

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Hen Ogledd

Yr Hen Ogledd, in English the Old North, is the region of Northern England and the southern Scottish Lowlands inhabited by the Celtic Britons of sub-Roman Britain in the Early Middle Ages.

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Henry Boase

Henry Boase (1763–1827) was an Cornish banker and author.

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Henry Dangar

Henry Dangar (1796 - 1861) was a surveyor and explorer of Australia in the early period of British colonisation.

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Henry Jenner

Henry Jenner (8 August 1848 – 8 May 1934) was a British scholar of the Celtic languages, a Cornish cultural activist, and the chief originator of the Cornish language revival.

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Henry Jenner (bishop)

Henry Lascelles Jenner, DD (b Chislehurst June 6, 1820 - d Preston-next-Wingham September 18, 1898) was a nineteenth century Anglican bishop.

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Herman the Recluse

Herman the Recluse (Hermannus Heremitus) was, according to legend, a thirteenth century Benedictine monk best known as the supposed author of the Codex Gigas, or Devil's Bible.

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History of Brittany

The history of Brittany may refer to the entire history of the Armorican peninsula or only to the creation and development of a specifically Brythonic culture and state in the Early Middle Ages and the subsequent history of that state.

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History of Cornwall

The history of Cornwall begins with the pre-Roman inhabitants, including speakers of a Celtic language, Common Brittonic, that would develop into Southwestern Brittonic and then the Cornish language.

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History of France

The first written records for the history of France appeared in the Iron Age.

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History of Plymouth

The History of Plymouth in Devon, England, extends back to the Bronze Age, when the first settlement began at Mount Batten a peninsula in Plymouth Sound facing onto the English Channel.

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History of the Welsh language

The history of the Welsh language spans over 1400 years, encompassing the stages of the language known as Primitive Welsh, Old Welsh, Middle Welsh, and Modern Welsh.

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Hogan (surname)

Hogan is an Irish surname.

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House of Tudor

The House of Tudor was an English royal house of Welsh origin, descended in the male line from the Tudors of Penmynydd.

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Hundreds of Cornwall

The hundreds of Cornwall (Keverangow Kernow) were administrative divisions (hundreds) into which Cornwall, the present day administrative county of England, in the United Kingdom, was divided between and 1894, when they were replaced with local government districts Some of the names of the hundreds ended with the suffix shire as in Pydarshire, East and West Wivelshire and Powdershire which were first recorded as names between 1184 and 1187.

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Hwerow Hweg

Hwerow Hweg is a 2002 drama film written and directed by Hungarian film-maker Antal Kovacs and filmed in the Cornish language.

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Ince Castle

Ince Castle is three miles (5 km) from Saltash in Cornwall, England, UK.

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Index of Cornwall-related articles

Presented below is an alphabetical index of articles related to Cornwall.

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Index of language articles

This is a partial index of 773 Wikipedia articles treating natural languages, arranged alphabetically.

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Index of United Kingdom-related articles

The following is an alphabetical list of articles related to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

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Indo-European languages

The Indo-European languages are a language family of several hundred related languages and dialects.

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Indo-European studies

Indo-European studies is a field of linguistics and an interdisciplinary field of study dealing with Indo-European languages, both current and extinct.

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Indo-European vocabulary

The following is a table of many of the most fundamental Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) words and roots, with their cognates in all of the major families of descendants.

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Inflected preposition

In linguistics, an inflected preposition is a type of word that occurs in some languages, that corresponds to the combination of a preposition and a personal pronoun.

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Insular Celtic languages

Insular Celtic languages are a group of Celtic languages that originated in Britain and Ireland, in contrast to the Continental Celtic languages of mainland Europe and Anatolia.

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Insular Celts

The Insular Celts are the speakers of the Insular Celtic languages, which comprise all the living Celtic languages as well as their precursors, but the term is mostly used in reference to the peoples of the British Iron Age prior to the Roman conquest, and their contemporaries in Ireland.

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Isles of Scilly

The Isles of Scilly (Syllan or Enesek Syllan) is an archipelago off the southwestern tip of Cornwall.

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ISO 639:c

|- !caa | || ||I/L|| ||čorti'||Chortí|| ||chortí||奇奥蒂语|| || |- !cab | || ||I/L|| || ||Garifuna||garifuna|| || || || |- !cac | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuj (San Sebastián Coatán)|| || || || || |- !cad | ||cad||I/L|| ||Hasí:nay||Caddo||caddo||caddo||卡多语||каддо||Caddo |- !cae | || ||I/L|| || ||Lehar|| || || || || |- !caf | || ||I/L|| ||ᑕᗸᒡ||Carrier, Southern|| || || || || |- !cag | || ||I/L|| || ||Nivaclé|| || || || || |- !cah | || ||I/L|| || ||Cahuarano|| ||cahuarano|| || || |- !caj | || ||I/E|| || ||Chané|| || || || || |- !cak | || ||I/L|| || ||Cakchiquel, Central|| ||cakchiquel central||喀克其奎语|| || |- !cal | || ||I/L|| || ||Carolinian||carolinien|| ||加罗林语||каролинский||Karolinisch |- !cam | || ||I/L|| || ||Cemuhî|| || || || || |- !can | || ||I/L|| || ||Chambri|| || || || || |- !cao | || ||I/L|| || ||Chácobo|| || || || || |- !cap | || ||I/L|| || ||Chipaya|| || || || || |- !caq | || ||I/L|| || ||Nicobarese, Car|| || || || || |- !car | ||car||I/L|| || ||Carib||carib(e)|| ||加勒比语||кариб|| |- !cas | || ||I/L|| || ||Tsimané|| || || || || |- !cat |ca||cat||I/L|| ||català||Catalan||catalan||catalán||加泰隆尼亚语; 加泰罗尼亚语; 加泰隆语; 瓦伦西亚语||каталанский||Katalanisch |- !cav | || ||I/L|| || ||Cavineña|| || || || || |- !caw | || ||I/L|| || ||Callawalla|| || || || || |- !cax | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiquitano||chiquitano||chiquitano|| || || |- !cay | || ||I/L|| ||Goyogo̱hó:nǫ’||Cayuga||cayuga||cayuga|| || || |- !caz | || ||I/E|| || ||Canichana|| || || || || |- !cbb | || ||I/L|| || ||Cabiyarí|| || || || || |- !cbc | || ||I/L|| || ||Carapana|| ||karapaná|| || || |- !cbd | || ||I/L|| || ||Carijona|| ||carijona|| || || |- !cbe | || ||I/E|| || ||Chipiajes|| || || || || |- !cbg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chimila|| ||chimila|| || || |- !cbh | || ||I/E|| || ||Cagua|| || || || || |- !cbi | || ||I/L|| || ||Chachi|| ||chachi|| || || |- !cbj | || ||I/L|| || ||Ede Cabe|| || || || || |- !cbk | || ||I/L|| || ||Chavacano|| || || || || |- !cbl | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Bualkhaw|| || || || || |- !(cbm) | || ||I/L|| || ||Cakchiquel, Yepocapa Southwestern|| || || || || |- !cbn | || ||I/L|| || ||Nyahkur|| || || || || |- !cbo | || ||I/L|| || ||Izora|| || || || || |- !cbr | || ||I/L|| || ||Cashibo-Cacataibo|| ||kashibo-kakataibo|| || || |- !cbs | || ||I/L|| || ||Cashinahua|| ||cashinahua|| || || |- !cbt | || ||I/L|| || ||Chayahuita|| || || || || |- !cbu | || ||I/L|| || ||Candoshi-Shapra|| || || || || |- !cbv | || ||I/L|| || ||Cacua|| || || || || |- !cbw | || ||I/L|| || ||Kinabalian|| || || || || |- !cby | || ||I/L|| || ||Carabayo|| || || || || |- !cca | || ||I/E|| || ||Cauca|| || || || || |- !ccc | || ||I/L|| || ||Chamicuro||chamicura|| || || || |- !ccd | || ||I/L|| || ||Cafundo Creole|| || || || || |- !cce | || ||I/L|| || ||Chopi|| || || || || |- !ccg | || ||I/L|| || ||Samba Daka|| || || || || |- !cch | || ||I/L|| || ||Atsam|| || || || || |- !ccj | || ||I/L|| || ||Kasanga|| || || || || |- !ccl | || ||I/L|| || ||Cutchi-Swahili|| || || || || |- !ccm | || ||I/L|| || ||Malaccan Creole Malay|| || || || || |- !cco | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Comaltepec|| || || || || |- !ccp | || ||I/L|| || ||Chakma|| || || || || |- !(ccq) | || ||I/L|| || ||Chaungtha|| || || || || |- !ccr | || ||I/E|| || ||Cacaopera|| ||cacaopera|| || || |- !(ccx) | || || || || ||Northern Zhuang|| || || || || |- !(ccy) | || || || || ||Southern Zhuang|| || || || || |- !cda | || ||I/L|| || ||Choni|| || || || || |- !cde | || ||I/L|| || ||Chenchu|| || || || || |- !cdf | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiru|| || || || || |- !cdg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chamari|| || || || || |- !cdh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chambeali|| || || || || |- !cdi | || ||I/L|| || ||Chodri|| || || || || |- !cdj | || ||I/L|| || ||Churahi|| || || || || |- !cdm | || ||I/L|| || ||Chepang|| || || || || |- !cdn | || ||I/L|| || ||Chaudangsi|| || || || || |- !cdo | || ||I/L||Chinese||閩東語||Min Dong Chinese|| || ||閩東話 || ||chinesisch (Ming Dong) |- !cdr | || ||I/L|| || ||Cinda-Regi-Tiyal|| || || || || |- !cds | || ||I/L|| || ||Chadian Sign Language|| || ||乍得手语|| || |- !cdy | || ||I/L|| || ||Chadong|| || || || || |- !cdz | || ||I/L|| || ||Koda|| ||koda|| || || |- !cea | || ||I/E|| || ||Chehalis, Lower|| || || || || |- !ceb | ||ceb||I/L|| ||S(in)ugboanon||Cebuano||cebuano||cebuano||宿务语; 宿雾语||себуано||Cebuano |- !ceg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chamacoco|| || || || || |- !cek | || ||I/L|| || ||Eastern Khumi Chin|| || || || || |- !cen | || ||I/L|| || ||Cen|| || || || || |- !ces |cs||cze||I/L|| ||čeština||Czech||tchèque||checo||捷克语||чешский||Tschechisch |- !cet | || ||I/L|| || ||Centúúm|| || || || || |- !cfa | || ||I/L|| || ||Dijim-Bwilim|| || || || || |- !cfd | || ||I/L|| || ||Cara|| || || || || |- !cfg | || ||I/L|| || ||Como Karim|| || || || || |- !cfm | || ||I/L|| || ||Falam Chin|| || || || || |- !cga | || ||I/L|| || ||Changriwa|| || || || || |- !cgc | || ||I/L|| || ||Kagayanen|| || || || || |- !cgg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiga|| || ||奇加语|| || |- !cgk | || ||I/L|| || ||Chocangacakha|| || || || || |- !cha |ch||cha||I/L|| ||Chamoru||Chamorro||chamorro||chamorro||查莫罗语||чаморро||Chamorro |- !chb | ||chb||I/E|| || ||Chibcha||chibcha||chibcha||奇布查语||чибча|| |- !chc | || ||I/E|| ||Iyeye||Catawba||catawba|| || || || |- !chd | || ||I/L|| || ||Chontal, Highland Oaxaca|| || ||高地琼塔尔语|| || |- !che |ce||che||I/L|| ||нохчийн||Chechen||tchétchène||checheno||车臣语||чеченский||Tschetschenisch |- !chf | || ||I/L|| || ||Chontal, Tabasco|| ||chontal de Tabasco|| || || |- !chg | ||chg||I/E|| ||جغتای||Chagatai||djaghataï|| ||查加台语; 查加泰语; 察合台语||чагатайский||Tschagataisch |- !chh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinook|| ||chinook|| || ||Chinook Wawa |- !chj | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Ojitlán|| || || || || |- !chk | ||chk||I/L|| || ||Chuukese||chuuk|| ||丘克语||чукотский||Chuukesisch |- !chl | || ||I/L|| || ||Cahuilla|| ||cahuilla|| || || |- !chm | ||chm||M/L|| ||марий||Mari (Russia)||mari||mari||马里语||марийский||Mari |- !chn | ||chn||I/L|| ||chinuk wawa||Chinook jargon||jargon chinook||jerga chinook||奇努克混合语||чинук жаргон|| |- !cho | ||cho||I/L|| ||Chahta||Choctaw||choctaw||choctaw||乔克托语||чоктав|| |- !chp | ||chp||I/L|| ||ᑌᓀᓲᒢᕄᓀ(Dëne Sųłiné)||Chipewyan||chipewyan|| ||奇佩维安语||чипевьян||Chipewyan |- !chq | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Quiotepec|| || || || || |- !chr | ||chr||I/L|| ||ᏣᎳᎩ||Cherokee||cherokee||cheroqui||切罗基语||чероки||Cherokee |- !(chs) | || ||I/E|| || ||Chumash|| || || || || |- !cht | || ||I/E|| || ||Cholón|| || || || || |- !chu |cu||chu||I/A|| ||ѩзыкъ словѣньскъ||Old Church Slavonic||slavon d'église vieux||eslavo eclesial||古教会斯拉夫语||церковнославянский||Altkirchenslawisch |- !chv |cv||chv||I/L|| ||Чӑваш||Chuvash||tchouvache||chuvasio||楚瓦什语||чувашский||Tschuwaschisch |- !chw | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuwabu|| || || || || |- !chx | || ||I/L|| || ||Chantyal|| || || || || |- !chy | ||chy||I/L|| ||Tsêhést||Cheyenne||cheyenne||cheyén||夏延语||чейенн|| |- !chz | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Ozumacín|| || || || || |- !cia | || ||I/L|| || ||Cia-Cia|| || || || || |- !cib | || ||I/L|| || ||Gbe, Ci|| || || || || |- !cic | || ||I/L|| ||Chikasha||Chickasaw|| ||chickasaw||奇卡索语|| || |- !cid | || ||I/E|| || ||Chimariko|| ||chimariko|| || || |- !cie | || ||I/L|| || ||Cineni|| || || || || |- !cih | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinali|| || || || || |- !cik | || ||I/L|| || ||Kinnauri, Chitkuli|| || || || || |- !cim | || ||I/L|| ||Zimbrisch||Cimbrian||cimbrien|| ||辛布里语|| ||Zimbern |- !cin | || ||I/L|| || ||Cinta Larga|| ||cinta larga|| || || |- !cip | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiapanec|| ||chiapaneco|| || || |- !cir | || ||I/L|| || ||Tiri|| || || || || |- !(cit) | || || || || ||Chittagonian|| || || || || |- !ciw | || ||I/L|| ||ᐊᓂᐦᔑᓈᐯᒧᐧᐃᓐ / ᐅᒋᐧᐯᒧᐧᐃᓐ(Anishinaabemowin / Ojibwemowin) ||Chippewa||chippewa|| ||奇帕瓦语||оджибве|| |- !ciy | || ||I/L|| || ||Chaima|| ||chaima|| || || |- !cja | || ||I/L|| || ||Cham, Western|| || ||西占语|| || |- !cje | || ||I/L|| || ||CHARu|| || || || || |- !cjh | || ||I/E|| || ||Chehalis, Upper|| || || || || |- !cji | || ||I/L|| || ||Chamalal||tchamalal||chamalal||查马拉尔语|| || |- !cjk | || ||I/L|| || ||Chokwe|| || ||乔克维语||чокве|| |- !cjm | || ||I/L|| || ||Cham, Eastern|| || ||东占语|| || |- !cjn | || ||I/L|| || ||Chenapian|| || || || || |- !cjo | || ||I/L|| || ||Ashéninka Pajonal|| || || || || |- !cjp | || ||I/L|| || ||Cabécar|| ||cabécar|| || || |- !(cjr) | || ||I/E|| || ||Chorotega|| || || || || |- !cjs | || ||I/L|| ||Шор||Shor|| ||shor||绍尔语||шорский|| |- !cjv | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuave|| || || || || |- !cjy | || ||I/L||Chinese||晋语||Jinyu Chinese|| || ||晉語|| ||chinesisch (Jinyu) |- !(cka) | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Khumi Awa|| || || || || |- !ckb | || ||I/L|| || ||Kurdish, Central|| || ||中库尔德语|| ||kurdisch |- !(ckc) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Northern|| || || || || |- !(ckd) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, South Central|| || || || || |- !(cke) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Eastern|| || || || || |- !(ckf) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Southern|| || || || || |- !ckh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chak|| || || || || |- !(cki) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Santa María De Jesús|| || || || || |- !(ckj) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Santo Domingo Xenacoj|| || || || || |- !(ckk) | || ||I/L||Cakchiquel|| ||Cakchiquel, Acatenango Southwestern|| || || || || |- !ckl | || ||I/L|| || ||Cibak|| || || || || |- !ckn | || ||I/L|| || ||Kaang Chin|| || || || || |- !cko | || ||I/L|| || ||Anufo|| || || || || |- !ckq | || ||I/L|| || ||Kajakse|| || || || || |- !ckr | || ||I/L|| || ||Kairak|| || || || || |- !cks | || ||I/L|| || ||Tayo|| || || || || |- !ckt | || ||I/L|| ||чаучу||Chukot|| || ||楚科奇语|| ||Tschuktschisch |- !cku | || ||I/L|| || ||Koasati|| ||koasati|| || || |- !ckv | || ||I/L|| || ||Kavalan||kavalan|| ||噶玛兰语|| ||Kavalanisch |- !(ckw) | || ||I/L|| || ||Cakchiquel, Western|| || || || || |- !ckx | || ||I/L|| || ||Caka|| || || || || |- !cky | || ||I/L|| || ||Cakfem-Mushere|| || || || || |- !ckz | || ||I/L|| || ||Cakchiquel-Quiché Mixed Language|| || || || || |- !cla | || ||I/L|| || ||Ron|| || || || || |- !clc | || ||I/L|| ||Tšinlhqot⤙in, Tsilhqot’in||Chilcotin||chilcotin|| ||奇尔科廷语|| || |- !cld | || ||I/L|| ||ܟܠܕܝܐ||Chaldean Neo-Aramaic|| || || || || |- !cle | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Lealao|| || || || || |- !clh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chilisso|| || || || || |- !cli | || ||I/L|| || ||Chakali|| || || || || |- !clj | || ||I/L|| || ||Laitu Chin|| || || || || |- !clk | || ||I/L|| || ||Idu-Mishmi|| || ||义都语; 义都-珞巴语|| || |- !cll | || ||I/L|| || ||Chala|| || || || || |- !clm | || ||I/L||Salishan||nəxʷsƛʼayʼəmʼúcən||Clallam, Klallam|| || ||克拉兰语|| || |- !clo | || ||I/L|| || ||Chontal, Lowland Oaxaca|| || ||低地琼塔尔语|| || |- !clt | || ||I/L|| || ||Lautu Chin|| || || || || |- !clu | || ||I/L|| || ||Caluyanun|| || || || || |- !clw | || ||I/L|| || ||Chulym|| || ||楚利姆语|| || |- !cly | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Eastern Highland|| ||chatino de la zona alta oriental|| || || |- !cma | || ||I/L|| || ||Maa|| || || || || |- !cme | || ||I/L|| || ||Cerma|| || || || || |- !cmg | || ||I/H|| || ||Mongolian, Classical|| || ||古典蒙古语|| ||mongolisch (klassisch) |- !cmi | || ||I/L|| || ||Emberá-Chamí|| || || || || |- !(cmk) | || ||I/E|| || ||Chimakum|| || || || || |- !cml | || ||I/L|| || ||Campalagian|| || || || || |- !cmm | || ||I/E|| || ||Michigamea|| || || || || |- !cmn | || ||I/L||Chinese||官話; 北方話||Mandarin Chinese|| ||chino mandarín||官話|| || |- !cmo | || ||I/L|| || ||Mnong, Central|| || ||中孟语|| || |- !cmr | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Mro|| || || || || |- !cms | || ||I/A|| || ||Messapic|| || || || || |- !cmt | || ||I/L|| || ||Camtho|| || || || || |- !cna | || ||I/L|| || ||Changthang|| || || || || |- !cnb | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Chinbon|| || || || || |- !cnc | || ||I/L|| || ||Côông|| || || || || |- !cng | || ||I/L|| || ||Qiang, Northern|| || ||北羌语|| || |- !cnh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Lai|| || || || || |- !cni | || ||I/L|| || ||Asháninka|| || || || || |- !cnk | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Khumi|| || || || || |- !cnl | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Lalana|| || || || || |- !(cnm) | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuj, Ixtatán|| || || || || |- !cno | || ||I/L|| || ||Con|| || || || || |- !cnr | ||cnr||I/L|| ||црногорски / crnogorski||Montenegrin||monténégrin||montenegrino||蒙特内哥罗语||черногорский||Montenegrinisch |- !cns | || ||I/L|| || ||Asmat, Central|| || || || || |- !cnt | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Tepetotutla|| || || || || |- !cnu | || ||I/L|| || ||Chenoua|| || || || || |- !cnw | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Ngawn|| || || || || |- !cnx | || ||I/H|| || ||Cornish, Middle|| || ||中古康沃尔语|| || |- !coa | || ||I/L|| || ||Malay, Cocos Islands|| || || || || |- !cob | || ||I/E|| || ||Chicomuceltec|| || || || || |- !coc | || ||I/L|| ||Kwikapa||Cocopa|| || || || || |- !cod | || ||I/L|| || ||Cocama-Cocamilla|| ||cocama-cocamilla|| || || |- !coe | || ||I/L|| || ||Koreguaje|| || || || || |- !cof | || ||I/L|| || ||Colorado|| ||colorado|| || || |- !cog | || ||I/L|| || ||Chong|| || || || || |- !coh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chonyi|| || || || || |- !coj | || ||I/E|| ||Tipai||Cochimi|| ||cochimí|| || || |- !cok | || ||I/L|| || ||Cora, Santa Teresa|| || || || || |- !col | || ||I/L|| || ||Columbia-Wenatchi|| || || || || |- !com | || ||I/L|| ||nʉmʉ tekwapʉ̱||Comanche||comanche|| ||科曼切语|| || |- !con | || ||I/L|| || ||Cofán|| ||cofán|| || || |- !coo | || ||I/L|| ||Saɬuɬtxʷ||Comox|| || ||科莫克斯语|| || |- !cop | ||cop||I/E|| ||||Coptic||copte||copto||科普特语||коптский||Koptisch |- !coq | || ||I/E|| || ||Coquille||coquille|| || || || |- !cor |kw||cor||I/L|| ||Kernewek||Cornish||cornique||córnico||康沃尔语; 康瓦尔语||корнский||Kornisch |- !cos |co||cos||I/L|| ||corsu||Corsican||corse||corso||科西嘉语||корсиканский||Korsisch |- !cot | || ||I/L|| || ||Caquinte|| || || || || |- !cou | || ||I/L|| || ||Wamey|| || || || || |- !cov | || ||I/L|| || ||Cao Miao||cao miao|| ||草苗语|| || |- !cow | || ||I/E|| || ||Cowlitz|| || ||考利茨语|| || |- !cox | || ||I/L|| || ||Nanti|| || || || || |- !coy | || ||I/E|| || ||Coyaima|| || || || || |- !coz | || ||I/L|| || ||Chochotec|| ||chocho|| || || |- !cpa | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Palantla|| || || || || |- !cpb | || ||I/L|| || ||Ashéninka, Ucayali-Yurúa|| || || || || |- !cpc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ajyíninka Apurucayali|| || || || || |- !cpg | || ||I/E|| || ||Greek (Cappadocian)|| || ||卡帕多细亚希腊语|| ||Griechisch (?) |- !cpi | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinese Pidgin English|| || || || || |- !cpn | || ||I/L|| || ||Cherepon|| || || || || |- !cpo | || ||I/L|| || ||Kpeego|| || || || || |- !cpp | || ||M/L|| || ||Portuguese-based creole languages|| || || || || |- !cps | || ||I/L|| || ||Capiznon|| || || || || |- !cpu | || ||I/L|| || ||Ashéninka, Pichis|| || || || || |- !cpx | || ||I/L||Chinese|| ||Pu-Xian Chinese|| || ||莆仙話|| || |- !cpy | || ||I/L|| || ||Ashéninka, South Ucayali|| || || || || |- !cqd | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuanqiandian Cluster Miao|| || ||川黔滇苗话|| || |- !cqu | || ||I/L|| || ||Quechua, Chilean|| || || || || |- !cra | || ||I/L|| || ||Chara|| || || || || |- !crb | || ||I/E|| || ||Carib, Island|| || || || || |- !crc | || ||I/L|| || ||Lonwolwol|| || || || || |- !crd | || ||I/L|| || ||Coeur d'Alene|| || || || || |- !cre |cr||cre||M/L||Cree||ᓀᐦᐃᔭᐤ(Nehiyāw)||Cree||cree||cree||克里语|| || |- !crf | || ||I/E|| || ||Caramanta|| || || || || |- !crg | || ||I/L|| || ||Michif|| || || || || |- !crh | ||crh||I/L|| ||Къырым Татар||Crimean Tatar||tatar de Crimé||tártaro de Crimea||克里米亚鞑靼语||крымскотатарский||Krimtatarisch |- !cri | || ||I/L|| || ||Sãotomense|| || || || || |- !crj | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||East Cree (Southern)|| || || || || |- !crk | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||Cree (Plains)|| || || || || |- !crl | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||East Cree (Northern)|| || || || || |- !crm | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||Cree (Moose)|| || || || || |- !crn | || ||I/L|| || ||Cora, El Nayar|| || || || || |- !cro | || ||I/L|| || ||Crow||crow||crow||克劳语|| || |- !crq | || ||I/L|| || ||Chorote, Iyo'wujwa|| || || || || |- !crr | || ||I/E|| || ||Carolina Algonquian|| || || || || |- !crs | || ||I/L|| || ||Seselwa Creole French|| || || || || |- !crt | || ||I/L|| || ||Chorote, Iyojwa'ja|| || || || || |- !(cru) | || || || || ||Carútana|| || || || || |- !crv | || ||I/L|| || ||Chaura|| || || || || |- !crw | || ||I/L|| || ||Chrau|| || || || || |- !crx | || ||I/L|| ||ᑕᗸᒡ||Carrier||carrier|| || || || |- !cry | || ||I/L|| || ||Cori|| || || || || |- !crz | || ||I/E|| || ||Cruzeño|| || || || || |- !csa | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Chiltepec|| || || || || |- !csb | ||csb||I/L|| ||kaszëbsczi||Kashubian||cachoube||casubio||卡舒比语||кашубский||Kaschubisch |- !csc | || ||I/L|| || ||Catalan Sign Language|| || ||加泰罗尼亚手语|| ||Katalonische Zeichensprache |- !csd | || ||I/L|| || ||Chiangmai Sign Language|| || ||清迈手语|| || |- !cse | || ||I/L|| || ||Czech Sign Language|| || ||捷克手语|| ||Tscechische Zeichensprache |- !csf | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuba Sign Language|| || ||古巴手语|| || |- !csg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chilean Sign Language|| || ||智利手语|| ||Chilenische Zeichensprache |- !csh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Asho|| || || || || |- !csi | || ||I/E|| || ||Miwok, Coast|| ||miwok costanoano|| || || |- !csj | || ||I/L|| || ||Songlai Chin|| || || || || |- !csk | || ||I/L|| || ||Jola-Kasa|| || || || || |- !csl | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinese Sign Language|| || ||中国手语|| ||Chinesische Zeichensprache |- !csm | || ||I/L|| || ||Miwok, Central Sierra|| || || || || |- !csn | || ||I/L|| || ||Colombian Sign Language|| || ||哥伦比亚手语|| ||Kolumbische Zeichensprache |- !cso | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Sochiapan|| || || || || |- !csq | || ||I/L|| || ||Croatia Sign Language|| || ||克罗地亚手语|| ||Kroatische Zeichensprache |- !csr | || ||I/L|| || ||Costa Rican Sign Language|| || ||哥斯达黎加手语|| ||Costa Ricanische Zeichensprache |- !css | || ||I/E|| || ||Ohlone (Southern)|| || || || || |- !cst | || ||I/L|| || ||Ohlone (Northern)|| || || || || |- !csv | || ||I/L|| || ||Sumtu Chin|| || || || || |- !csw | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||Cree (Swampy)|| || || || || |- !csy | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Siyin|| || || || || |- !csz | || ||I/L|| || ||Coos|| ||coos|| || || |- !cta | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Tataltepec|| ||chatino de Tataltepec|| || || |- !ctc | || ||I/L|| || ||Chetco|| || || || || |- !ctd | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Tedim|| || || || || |- !cte | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Tepinapa|| || || || || |- !ctg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chittagonian|| || ||吉大港语|| || |- !cth | || ||I/L|| || ||Thaiphum Chin|| || || || || |- !(cti) | || ||I/L|| || ||Chol, Tila|| || || || || |- !ctl | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Tlacoatzintepec|| || || || || |- !ctm | || ||I/E|| || ||Chitimacha||chitimacha|| || || || |- !ctn | || ||I/L|| || ||Chhintange|| || || || || |- !cto | || ||I/L|| || ||Emberá-Catío|| || || || || |- !ctp | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Western Highland|| ||chatino de la zona alta occidental|| || || |- !cts | || ||I/L|| || ||Bicolano, Northern Catanduanes|| || || || || |- !ctt | || ||I/L|| || ||Wayanad Chetti|| || || || || |- !ctu | || ||I/L|| || ||Chol, Tumbalá|| || || || || |- !ctz | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Zacatepec|| ||chatino de Zacatepec|| || || |- !cua | || ||I/L|| || ||Cua|| || || || || |- !cub | || ||I/L|| || ||Cubeo|| ||cubeo|| || || |- !cuc | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Usila|| || || || || |- !cug | || ||I/L|| || ||Cung|| || || || || |- !cuh | || ||I/L|| || ||Chuka|| || || || || |- !cui | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuiba|| ||cuiba|| || || |- !cuj | || ||I/L|| || ||Mashco Piro|| || || || || |- !cuk | || ||I/L|| || ||Kuna, San Blas|| || || || || |- !cul | || ||I/L|| || ||Culina|| || || || || |- !cum | || ||I/E|| || ||Cumeral|| || || || || |- !(cun) | || ||I/L|| || ||Quiché, Cunén|| || || || || |- !cuo | || ||I/E|| || ||Cumanagoto|| ||cumanagoto|| || || |- !cup | || ||I/E|| ||Kuupangaxwichem||Cupeño||cupeno||cupeño|| || || |- !cuq | || ||I/L|| || ||Cun|| || ||村语|| || |- !cur | || ||I/L|| || ||Chhulung|| || || || || |- !cut | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuicatec, Teutila|| || || || || |- !cuu | || ||I/L|| || ||Tai Ya|| || ||傣雅语|| || |- !cuv | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuvok|| || || || || |- !cuw | || ||I/L|| || ||Chukwa|| || || || || |- !cux | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuicatec, Tepeuxila|| || || || || |- !cvg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chug|| || || || || |- !cvn | || ||I/L|| || ||Chinantec, Valle Nacional|| || || || || |- !cwa | || ||I/L|| || ||Kabwa|| || || || || |- !cwb | || ||I/L|| || ||Maindo|| || || || || |- !cwd | || ||I/L||Cree|| ||Cree (Woods)|| || || || || |- !cwe | || ||I/L|| || ||Kwere|| || || || || |- !cwg | || ||I/L|| || ||Chewong|| || || || || |- !cwt | || ||I/L|| || ||Kuwaataay|| || || || || |- !cya | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Nopala|| ||chatino de Nopala|| || || |- !cyb | || ||I/E|| || ||Cayubaba|| || || || || |- !cym |cy||wel||I/L|| ||Cymraeg||Welsh||gallois||galés||威尔士语; 威尔斯语||валлийский||Walisisch |- !cyo | || ||I/L|| || ||Cuyonon|| || || || || |- !czh | || ||I/L||Chinese||徽州话||Huizhou Chinese|| || ||徽語|| ||chinesisch (Huizhou) |- !czk | || ||I/E|| || ||Knaanic|| || ||迦南语; 犹太-斯拉夫语|| || |- !czn | || ||I/L|| || ||Chatino, Zenzontepec|| ||chatino de Zenzontepec|| || || |- !czo | || ||I/L||Chinese|| ||Min Zhong Chinese|| || ||閩中話|| ||chinesisch (Min Zhong) |- !czt | || ||I/L|| || ||Chin, Zotung|| || || || || | Category:ISO 639.

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ISO 639:o

|- !oaa | || ||I/L|| || ||Orok|| || ||鄂罗克语|| || |- !oac | || ||I/L|| || ||Oroch|| || ||鄂罗奇语|| || |- !oar | || ||I/A|| || ||Aramaic, Old|| || ||古阿拉米语|| ||Altaramäisch |- !oav | || ||I/H|| || ||Avar, Old|| || ||古阿瓦尔语|| || |- !obi | || ||I/E|| || ||Obispeño|| || || || || |- !obk | || ||I/L|| || ||Southern Bontok|| || || || || |- !obl | || ||I/L|| || ||Oblo|| || || || || |- !obm | || ||I/A|| || ||Moabite|| || ||摩押语|| || |- !obo | || ||I/L|| || ||Manobo, Obo|| || || || || |- !obr | || ||I/H|| || ||Burmese, Old|| || ||古缅甸语|| ||Altburmesisch |- !obt | || ||I/H|| || ||Breton, Old|| || ||古布列塔尼语|| ||Altbretonisch |- !obu | || ||I/L|| || ||Obulom|| || || || || |- !oca | || ||I/L|| || ||Ocaina|| ||ocaina|| || || |- !(occ) | || || || || ||Occidental|| || || || || |- !och | || ||I/A||Chinese|| ||Old Chinese|| || ||上古漢語|| ||Altchinesisch |- !oci |oc||oci||I/L|| ||occitan||Occitan (post 1500)||occitan (après 1500)||occitano||奥克西唐语; 奥克西坦语; 奥克语||окситанский||Okzitanisch |- !oco | || ||I/H|| || ||Cornish, Old|| || ||古康沃尔语|| || |- !ocu | || ||I/L|| || ||Matlatzinca, Atzingo|| || || || || |- !oda | || ||I/L|| || ||Odut|| || || || || |- !odk | || ||I/L|| || ||Od|| || || || || |- !odt | || ||I/H|| || ||Dutch, Old|| || ||古荷兰语|| || |- !odu | || ||I/L|| || ||Odual|| || || || || |- !ofo | || ||I/E|| || ||Ofo||ofo|| || || || |- !ofs | || ||I/H||Friesisch|| ||Frisian, Old|| || ||古弗里西亚语|| ||Altfriesisch |- !ofu | || ||I/L|| || ||Efutop|| || || || || |- !ogb | || ||I/L|| || ||Ogbia|| || || || || |- !ogc | || ||I/L|| || ||Ogbah|| || || || || |- !oge | || ||I/H|| || ||Georgian, Old|| || ||古格鲁吉亚语|| ||Altgeorgisch |- !ogg | || ||I/L|| || ||Ogbogolo|| || || || || |- !(ogn) | || || || || ||Ogan|| || || || || |- !ogo | || ||I/L|| || ||Khana|| || || || || |- !ogu | || ||I/L|| || ||Ogbronuagum|| || || || || |- !oht | || ||I/A|| || ||Hittite, Old|| || ||古赫梯语|| || |- !ohu | || ||I/H|| || ||Hungarian, Old|| || ||古匈牙利语|| || |- !oia | || ||I/L|| || ||Oirata|| || || ||оирата|| |- !oin | || ||I/L|| || ||One, Inebu|| || || || || |- !ojb | || ||I/L|| || Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwemowin) ||Ojibwa, Northwestern|| || || || || |- !ojc | || ||I/L|| || Anishinaabemowin (Ojibwemowin) ||Ojibwa, Central|| || || || || |- !ojg | || ||I/L|| || Nishnaabemwin (Jibwemwin) ||Ojibwa, Eastern|| || || || || |- !oji |oj||oji||M/L|| ||ᐊᓂᔑᓇᐯᒧᐎᓐ (Anishinaabemowin)||Ojibwa||ojibwa||ojibwa||奥吉布瓦语||оджибва|| |- !ojp | || ||I/H|| || ||Japanese, Old|| || ||古日语|| || |- !ojs | || ||I/L|| || ᐊᓂᔑᓂᓂᒧᐎᓐ (Anishininiimowin) ||Ojibwa, Severn|| || || || || |- !ojv | || ||I/L|| || ||Ontong Java|| || || || ||Ontong Java |- !ojw | || ||I/L|| || Anihšināpēmowin (Nakawēmowin) ||Ojibwa, Western|| || || || || |- !oka | || ||I/L|| || ||Okanagan|| || || || || |- !okb | || ||I/L|| || ||Okobo|| || || || || |- !okd | || ||I/L|| || ||Okodia|| || || || || |- !oke | || ||I/L|| || ||Okpe (Southwestern Edo)|| || || || || |- !okg | || ||I/E|| || ||Koko Babangk|| || || || || |- !okh | || ||I/L|| || ||Koresh-e Rostam|| || || || || |- !oki | || ||I/L|| || ||Okiek|| || || || || |- !okj | || ||I/E|| || ||Oko-Juwoi|| || || || || |- !okk | || ||I/L|| || ||One, Kwamtim|| || || || || |- !okl | || ||I/E|| || ||Old Kentish Sign Language|| || ||古肯特手语|| || |- !okm | || ||I/H|| || ||Korean, Middle (10th–16th centuries)|| || ||中古朝鲜语|| ||Mittelkoreanisch |- !okn | || ||I/L|| || ||Oki-No-Erabu|| || ||冲永良部岛琉球语|| || |- !oko | || ||I/H|| || ||Korean, Old (3rd–9th centuries)|| || ||古朝鲜语|| ||Altkoreanisch |- !okr | || ||I/L|| || ||Kirike|| || || || || |- !oks | || ||I/L|| || ||Oko-Eni-Osayen|| || || || || |- !oku | || ||I/L|| || ||Oku|| || || || || |- !okv | || ||I/L|| || ||Orokaiva|| || || || || |- !okx | || ||I/L|| || ||Okpe (Northwestern Edo)|| || || || || |- !ola | || ||I/L|| || ||Walungge|| || || || || |- !old | || ||I/L|| || ||Mochi|| || || || || |- !ole | || ||I/L|| || ||Olekha|| || || || || |- !olk | || ||I/E|| || ||Olkol|| || || || || |- !olm | || ||I/L|| || ||Oloma|| || || || || |- !olo | || ||I/L|| || ||Livvi|| || || || || |- !olr | || ||I/L|| || ||Olrat|| || || || || |- !oma | || ||I/L|| || ||Omaha-Ponca||omaha-ponca||omaha-ponca|| || || |- !omb | || ||I/L|| || ||Ambae, East|| || || || || |- !omc | || ||I/E|| || ||Mochica|| || || || || |- !ome | || ||I/E|| || ||Omejes|| || || || || |- !omg | || ||I/L|| || ||Omagua|| ||omagua|| || || |- !omi | || ||I/L|| || ||Omi|| || || || || |- !omk | || ||I/E|| || ||Omok|| || || || || |- !oml | || ||I/L|| || ||Ombo|| || || || || |- !omn | || ||I/A|| || ||Minoan|| || || || || |- !omo | || ||I/L|| || ||Utarmbung|| || || || || |- !omp | || ||I/H|| || ||Manipuri, Old|| || ||古曼尼普尔语|| || |- !omr | || ||I/H|| || ||Marathi, Old|| || ||古马拉地语|| || |- !omt | || ||I/L|| || ||Omotik|| || || || || |- !omu | || ||I/E|| || ||Omurano|| ||omurano|| || || |- !omw | || ||I/L|| || ||Tairora, South|| || || || || |- !omx | || ||I/H|| || ||Mon, Old|| || ||古孟语|| || |- !ona | || ||I/L|| || ||Ona|| || || || || |- !onb | || ||I/L|| || ||Lingao|| || ||临高语|| || |- !one | || ||I/L|| ||Onʌyota’a:ka||Oneida||oneida||oneida||奥内达语|| || |- !ong | || ||I/L|| || ||Olo|| || || || || |- !oni | || ||I/L|| || ||Onin|| || || || || |- !onj | || ||I/L|| || ||Onjob|| || || || || |- !onk | || ||I/L|| || ||One, Kabore|| || || || || |- !onn | || ||I/L|| || ||Onobasulu|| || || || || |- !ono | || ||I/L|| ||Onǫta’kéka’||Onondaga||onondaga||onondaga|| || || |- !onp | || ||I/L|| || ||Sartang|| || || || || |- !onr | || ||I/L|| || ||One, Northern|| || || || || |- !ons | || ||I/L|| || ||Ono|| || || || || |- !ont | || ||I/L|| || ||Ontenu|| || || || || |- !onu | || ||I/L|| || ||Unua|| || || || || |- !onw | || ||I/H|| || ||Nubian, Old|| || ||古努比亚语|| || |- !onx | || ||I/L|| || ||Onin Based Pidgin|| || || || || |- !ood | || ||I/L|| ||O'odham||Tohono O'odham||papago||pápago|| ||тогоно о'одам||Tohono O'odham |- !oog | || ||I/L|| || ||Ong|| || || || || |- !oon | || ||I/L|| || ||Önge|| || || || || |- !oor | || ||I/L|| || ||Oorlams|| || || || || |- !oos | || ||I/A|| || ||Ossetic, Old|| || ||古奥塞梯语|| || |- !opa | || ||I/L|| || ||Okpamheri|| || || || || |- !(ope) | || || || || ||Old Persian|| || || || || |- !opk | || ||I/L|| || ||Kopkaka|| || || || || |- !opm | || ||I/L|| || ||Oksapmin|| || || || || |- !opo | || ||I/L|| || ||Opao|| || || || || |- !opt | || ||I/E|| || ||Opata|| ||ópata|| || || |- !opy | || ||I/L|| || ||Ofayé|| || || || || |- !ora | || ||I/L|| || ||Oroha|| || || || || |- !orc | || ||I/L|| || ||Orma|| || || || || |- !ore | || ||I/L|| || ||Orejón|| ||orejón|| || || |- !org | || ||I/L|| || ||Oring|| || || || || |- !orh | || ||I/L|| || ||Oroqen|| || ||鄂伦春语|| || |- !ori |or||ori||M/L|| ||ଓଡ଼ିଆ||Oriya||oriya||oriya||奥利亚语; 奥里亚语||ория||Oriya |- !(ork) | || || || || ||Orokaiva|| || || || || |- !orm |om||orm||M/L|| ||Oromoo||Oromo||galla||oromo||奥罗莫语||оромо||Oromo |- !orn | || ||I/L|| || ||Orang Kanaq|| || || || || |- !oro | || ||I/L|| || ||Orokolo|| || || || || |- !orr | || ||I/L|| || ||Oruma|| || || || || |- !ors | || ||I/L|| || ||Orang Seletar|| || || || || |- !ort | || ||I/L|| || ||Oriya, Adivasi|| || || || || |- !oru | || ||I/L|| || ||Ormuri|| || || || || |- !orv | || ||I/H|| || ||Russian, Old|| || ||古俄语|| || |- !orw | || ||I/L|| || ||Oro Win|| ||oro win|| || || |- !orx | || ||I/L|| || ||Oro|| || || || || |- !ory | || ||I/L|| || ||Oriya (individual language)|| || || || || |- !orz | || ||I/L|| || ||Ormu|| || || || || |- !osa | ||osa||I/L|| || ||Osage||osage||osage||奥萨格语||оседжи|| |- !osc | || ||I/A|| || ||Oscan||osque||osco||奥斯坎语||оскский||Oskisch |- !osi | || ||I/L|| || ||Osing|| || || || || |- !oso | || ||I/L|| || ||Ososo|| || || || || |- !osp | || ||I/H|| || ||Spanish, Old|| || ||古西班牙语|| || |- !oss |os||oss||I/L|| ||иронау||Ossetian||ossète||oseto||奥塞梯语; 奥塞提语||осетинский||Ossetisch |- !ost | || ||I/L|| || ||Osatu|| || || || || |- !osu | || ||I/L|| || ||One, Southern|| || || || || |- !osx | || ||I/H|| || ||Saxon, Old|| || ||古撒克逊语|| || |- !ota | ||ota||I/H|| ||لسان عثمانى||Turkish, Ottoman (1500–1928)||Turc ottoman||Turco-otomano||奥斯曼土耳其语||старотурецкий||Osmanisch |- !otb | || ||I/H|| || ||Tibetan, Old|| || ||古藏语|| || |- !otd | || ||I/L|| || ||Dohoi|| || || || || |- !ote | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Mezquital|| || || || || |- !oti | || ||I/E|| || ||Oti|| || || || || |- !otk | || ||I/H|| || ||Turkish, Old|| || ||古突厥语|| || |- !otl | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Tilapa|| || || || || |- !otm | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Eastern Highland|| || || || || |- !otn | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Tenango|| || || || || |- !otq | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Querétaro|| || || || || |- !otr | || ||I/L|| || ||Otoro|| || || || || |- !ots | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Estado de México|| || || || || |- !ott | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Temoaya|| || || || || |- !otu | || ||I/E|| || ||Otuke|| || || || || |- !otw | || ||I/L|| || Nishnaabemwin (Daawaamwin) ||Ottawa||ottawa|| || || || |- !otx | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Texcatepec|| || || || || |- !oty | || ||I/A|| || ||Tamil, Old|| || ||古泰米尔语|| || |- !otz | || ||I/L|| || ||Otomi, Ixtenco|| || || || || |- !oua | || ||I/L|| || ||Tagargrent|| || || || || |- !oub | || ||I/L|| || ||Glio-Oubi|| || || || || |- !oue | || ||I/L|| || ||Oune|| || || || || |- !oui | || ||I/H|| || ||Uighur, Old|| || ||回鹘语|| || |- !oum | || ||I/E|| || ||Ouma|| || || || || |- !oun | || ||I/L|| || ||!O!ung|| || || || || |- !owi | || ||I/L|| || ||Owiniga|| || || || || |- !owl | || ||I/H|| || ||Welsh, Old|| || ||古威尔士语|| || |- !oyb | || ||I/L|| || ||Oy|| || || || || |- !oyd | || ||I/L|| || ||Oyda|| || || || || |- !oym | || ||I/L|| || ||Wayampi|| ||wayampi|| || || |- !oyy | || ||I/L|| || ||Oya'oya|| || || || || |- !ozm | || ||I/L|| || ||Koonzime|| || || || || | Category:ISO 639.

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ISO/IEC 8859-14

ISO/IEC 8859-14:1998, Information technology — 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets — Part 14: Latin alphabet No.

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It's a Long Way to Tipperary

"It's a Long Way to Tipperary" is a British music hall song written by Jack Judge and co-credited to Henry James "Harry" Williams.

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Iwan (name)

Iwan is a masculine given name and a surname.

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Jabberwocky

"Jabberwocky" is a nonsense poem written by Lewis Carroll about the killing of a creature named "the Jabberwock".

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Jack Kerouac

Jack Kerouac (born Jean-Louis Kérouac (though he called himself Jean-Louis Lebris de Kérouac); March 12, 1922 – October 21, 1969) was an American novelist and poet of French-Canadian descent.

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Jack the Giant Killer

"Jack the Giant Killer" is an English fairy tale and legend about a young adult who slays a number of giants during King Arthur's reign.

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Jacob (name)

Jacob is a common male first name and a less well-known surname.

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Jago (name)

Jago is a Cornish name most commonly found as a surname, though also used as a forename.

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James (name)

James is the (Vulgar/Later Latin) form of the Hebrew name Yaʻaqov (known as Jacob in its earlier Latin form).

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James Jenkins (Cornish scholar)

James Jenkins (died 1710) was a Cornish scholar who left some verses giving moral advice on child raising and marriage in the Cornish language.

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Jennifer (given name)

Jennifer is a feminine given name, a Cornish form of Guinevere/Gwenhwyfar adopted into the English language during the 20th century.

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Jesus (name)

The proper name Jesus used in the English language originates from the Latin form of the Greek name Ἰησοῦς (Iēsous), a rendition of the Hebrew Yeshua (rtl), also having the variants Joshua or Jeshua.

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John (given name)

John is a common masculine given name in the English language of originally Semitic origin.

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John Bolitho

John Bolitho (1930–2005) (Cornish Jowan Bolitho) was born in Bude in Cornwall, and spent his working life in the Royal Navy, the theatre and television (including performances in the Black and White Minstrel Show, the Royal Variety Performance and the Billy Cotton Band Show), and business.

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John Boson (writer)

John Boson (1655–1730) was a writer in the Cornish language.

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John Davey (Cornish speaker)

John Davey or Davy (1812–1891) was a Cornish farmer who was one of the last people with some traditional knowledge of the Cornish language.

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John Hobson Mathews

John Hobson Mathews (1858-1914) was a Roman Catholic Historian, Archivist and Solicitor.

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John Kennall

Dr John Kennall, LL.D. (aka John Kenold) (1511–1592) was Archdeacon of Oxford and a noted pluralist.

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John of Cornwall (grammarian)

John of Cornwall, possibly called in Latin Johannes Cornubiensis or Johannes de Sancto Germano was a 14th-century scholar and teacher, author of the English grammar Speculum Grammaticale He is not to be confused with the twelfth-century theologian John of Cornwall who authored the Eulogium ad Alexandrum Papam III.

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John Trevisa

Polychronicon Ranulphi Higdin, Monachi Cestrensis, 1865 John Trevisa (or John of Trevisa; Ioannes Trevisa; fl. 1342 – 1402 AD) was a Cornish writer and translator.

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John Whitaker (historian)

John Whitaker B.D., F.S.A. (1735 in Manchester – 1808 in Ruan Lanihorne), was an English historian and Anglican clergyman.

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Joseph Bédier

Joseph Bédier (28 January 1864 – 29 August 1938) was a French writer and scholar and historian of medieval France.

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Joseph Hunkin (bishop)

Joseph Wellington Hunkin (25 September 1887 – 28 October 1950) was the eighth Bishop of Truro from 1935 to 1950.

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Julyan Holmes

Julyan Holmes is a Cornish scholar and poet.

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Justin (name)

Justin is an anglicized form of the Latin given name Justinus, a derivative of Justus, meaning "just", "fair", or "righteous".

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Kehillat Kernow

Kehillat Kernow (The Jewish Community of Cornwall) is a Jewish community with about 100 members in Cornwall, England, associated with the Movement for Reform Judaism.

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Kelly (surname)

Kelly is a surname in the English language.

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Kelly's of Cornwall

Kelly's of Cornwall is a manufacturer of ice cream based in Bodmin, Cornwall.

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Ken George

Kenneth "Ken" J. George, is a British oceanographer, poet, and linguist noted as being the originator of Kernewek Kemmyn, an orthography for the Cornish language which he claims is more faithful to Middle Cornish phonology than its precursor (Unified Cornish).

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Kenneggy Downs

Kenneggy Downs is a hamlet on the A394 in Cornwall, UK.

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Kernewek Kemmyn

Kernewek Kemmyn (Common Cornish or "KK") is a variety of the revived Cornish language.

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Kernewek Lowender

The Kernewek Lowender (officially the Kernewek Lowender Copper Coast Cornish Festival) is a Cornish-themed biennial festival held in the Copper Coast towns of Kadina, Moonta and Wallaroo on Yorke Peninsula, South Australia.

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Kernowek Standard

Kernowek Standard (KS, Standard Cornish), its initial version spelt Kernowak Standard, is a variety of revived Cornish.

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Kerris

Kerris (Kerys) is a settlement in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom at.

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Kescusulyans Kernow (Conference of Cornwall)

Kescusulyans Kernow (Conference of Cornwall) was an independent non-political Cornish conference which was held twice yearly at Perranporth, Cornwall, England, UK, between 1987-1994.

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Kesva an Taves Kernewek

Kesva an Taves Kernewek (Cornish for Cornish Language Board) is an organisation that promotes the Cornish language.

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Killas

Killas is a Cornish mining term for metamorphic rock strata of sedimentary origin which were altered by heat from the intruded granites in the English counties of Devon and Cornwall.

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Kingdom of England

The Kingdom of England (French: Royaume d'Angleterre; Danish: Kongeriget England; German: Königreich England) was a sovereign state on the island of Great Britain from the 10th century—when it emerged from various Anglo-Saxon kingdoms—until 1707, when it united with Scotland to form the Kingdom of Great Britain.

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Kingdom of Great Britain

The Kingdom of Great Britain, officially called simply Great Britain,Parliament of the Kingdom of England.

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Kingdom of Strathclyde

Strathclyde (lit. "Strath of the River Clyde"), originally Ystrad Clud or Alclud (and Strath-Clota in Anglo-Saxon), was one of the early medieval kingdoms of the Britons in Hen Ogledd ("the Old North"), the Brythonic-speaking parts of what is now southern Scotland and northern England.

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Kinship Terms: A Numerical Variation

Variations in the number of lexical categories across the languages is a notable idea in cultural anthropology.

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Knockentiber

Knockentiber (Scottish Gaelic: Cnoc an Tobair, hill of the well) is a village in East Ayrshire, Parish of Kilmaurs, Scotland.

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Knocker (folklore)

The Knocker, Knacker, Bwca (Welsh), Bucca (Cornish) or Tommyknocker (US) is a mythical creature in Welsh, Cornish and Devon folklore.

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Korrigan

In Breton folklore, a Korrigan (is a fairy or dwarf-like spirit. The word korrigan means "small-dwarf" (korr means dwarf, ig is a diminutive and the suffix an is a hypocoristic), it is closely related to the Cornish word korrik which means gnome. Their name changes according to the place. Among the other names, there are korrig,Theresa Bane, Encyclopedia of Fairies in World Folklore and Mythology, p205, 2013, McFarland & Company, korred, korrs, kores, couril, crion, goric, kornandon, ozigan, nozigan, torrigan, viltañs, poulpikan, paotred ar sabad...

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Kowethas an Yeth Kernewek

Kowethas an Yeth Kernewek (The Cornish Language Fellowship) is a Cornish language association which exists to promote, encourage and foster the use of the Cornish language.

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Kresen Kernow

The Kresen Kernow (Cornish for Cornwall Centre) is a project funded by Heritage Lottery Fund and Cornwall Council which aims to serve as an archive centre for Cornwall.

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Kw

kw or KW may refer to.

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L. C. R. Duncombe-Jewell

Louis Charles Richard Duncombe-Jewell (10 September 1866–1947), born Louis Charles Richard Jewell, was a soldier, special war correspondent of The Times and Morning Post, sportsman and sometimes poet, he was a champion of the Cornish language.

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Language and the euro

Several linguistic issues have arisen in relation to the spelling of the words euro and cent in the many languages of the member states of the European Union, as well as in relation to grammar and the formation of plurals.

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Language death

In linguistics, language death occurs when a language loses its last native speaker.

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Language revitalization

Language revitalization, also referred to as language revival or reversing language shift, is an attempt to halt or reverse the decline of a language or to revive an extinct one.

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Languages of Cornwall

Even if no language is formally recognised as official in the ceremonial county of Cornwall, English is used for all official purposes. Cornish, which had been used as a primary language by Cornish people throughout most of its history, ceased to be spoken as community tongue in the late 17th century. However, it has been revived since 1904, with the publication of A Handbook of Cornish language, by Henry Jenner. Nowadays, it is recognised as a regional language of England. Anglo-Cornish (also known as Cornish English, Cornu-English, or Cornish dialect) is a dialect of English spoken in Cornwall by Cornish people. Dialectal English spoken in Cornwall is to some extent influenced by Cornish grammar, and often includes words derived from the Cornish language. The Cornish language is a Celtic language of the Brythonic branch, as are the Welsh and Breton languages.

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Languages of Europe

Most languages of Europe belong to the Indo-European language family.

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Languages of the European Union

The languages of the European Union are languages used by people within the member states of the European Union (EU).

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Languages of the United Kingdom

English, in various dialects, is the most widely spoken language of the United Kingdom, however there are a number of regional languages also spoken. There are 11 indigenous languages spoken across the British Isles: 5 Celtic, 3 Germanic, and 3 Romance. There are also many immigrant languages spoken in the British Isles, mainly within inner city areas; these languages are mainly from South Asia and Eastern Europe. The de facto official language of the United Kingdom is English, which is spoken by approximately 59.8 million residents, or 98% of the population, over the age of three.According to the 2011 census, 53,098,301 people in England and Wales, 5,044,683 people in Scotland, and 1,681,210 people in Northern Ireland can speak English "well" or "very well"; totalling 59,824,194. Therefore, out of the 60,815,385 residents of the UK over the age of three, 98% can speak English "well" or "very well". An estimated 700,000 people speak Welsh in the UK,, by Hywel M Jones, page 115, 13.5.1.6, England. Published February 2012. Retrieved 28 March 2016. an official language in Wales and the only de jure official language in any part of the UK. Approximately 1.5 million people in the UK speak Scots—although there is debate as to whether this is a distinct language, or a variety of English.A.J. Aitken in The Oxford Companion to the English Language, Oxford University Press 1992. p.894 There is some discussion of the languages of the United Kingdom's three Crown dependencies (Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man), though they are not part of the United Kingdom.

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Languages of the United States

Many languages are spoken, or historically have been spoken, in the United States.

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Languages of Wales

The two official languages of Wales are Welsh and English.

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Lanner, Cornwall

Lanner (Lannergh) is a village and civil parish in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Lanyon (Madron)

Lanyon is a hamlet in the parish of Madron in Cornwall, England, UK.

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Last speaker of the Cornish language

In the 18th and 19th centuries, there was academic interest in finding the last native speaker of the Cornish language.

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Le Kov

Le Kov ("a place of memory" in Cornish) is the second studio album by Welsh singer-songwriter Gwenno.

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Legends of the Fall

Legends of the Fall is a 1994 American epic historical drama film directed by Edward Zwick and starring Brad Pitt, Anthony Hopkins, Aidan Quinn, Julia Ormond and Henry Thomas.

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Lelant

Lelant (Lannanta) is a village in west Cornwall, England, UK.

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Lescudjack Hill Fort

Lescudjack Hill fort is the name given to the unexcavated Iron Age settlement located in Penzance, Cornwall.

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Lesnewth

Lesnewth (Lysnowyth) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Library of Congress Classification:Class P -- Language and Literature

Class P: Language and Literature is a first order classification in the Library of Congress Classification system.

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Liet International

Liet International (West Frisian: Liet Ynternasjonaal), formerly Liet-Lávlut, is a song contest for musicians who speak any of Europe's regional or minority languages that was held the first time in Friesland in 2002.

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Linkinhorne

Linkinhorne (in Cornish Lanngynhorn) is a civil parish and village in southeast Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Lisa Simpson

Lisa Marie Simpson is a fictional character in the animated television series The Simpsons.

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Liss

Liss (previously spelt Lys or Lyss) is a village and civil parish in the East Hampshire district of Hampshire, England, 3.3 miles (5.3 km) north-east of Petersfield, on the A3 road, on the Hampshire/West Sussex border.

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List of acronyms: C

(Main list of acronyms).

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List of acronyms: K

(Main list of acronyms).

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List of adjectivals and demonyms for subcontinental regions

The following is a list of adjectival forms of subcontinental regions in English and their demonymic equivalents, which denote the people or the inhabitants of these subcontinental regions.

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List of Anglo-Cornish words

This is a select list of Cornish dialect words in English—while some of these terms are obsolete others remain in use.

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List of Arthurian characters

The Arthurian legend features many characters, including the Knights of the Round Table and members of King Arthur's family.

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List of Celtic-language media

The list below contains information on the different types of media available in the Celtic languages.

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List of contemporary ethnic groups

The following is a list of contemporary ethnic groups.

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List of Cornish writers

This is a list of writers in English and Cornish, who are associated with Cornwall and Cornish linguists (Rol a skriforyon Kernewek).

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List of countries and dependencies and their capitals in native languages

The following chart lists countries and dependencies along with their capital cities, in English as well as any additional official language(s).

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List of countries by spoken languages

This list shows countries/disputed countries organised by the languages which are spoken there.

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List of country-name etymologies

This list covers English language country names with their etymologies.

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List of destroyed libraries

Libraries have been deliberately or accidentally destroyed or badly damaged.

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List of endangered languages in Europe

An endangered language is a language that is at risk of falling out of use, generally because it has few surviving speakers.

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List of English words of Brittonic origin

The number of English words known to be derived from the Brittonic language is remarkably small.

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List of English words of Welsh origin

This is a list of English language words of Welsh language origin.

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List of French words of Gaulish origin

The Gaulish language, and presumably its many dialects and closely allied sister languages, left a few hundred words in French and many more in nearby Romance languages, i.e. Franco-Provençal (Eastern France and Western Switzerland), Occitan (Southern France), Catalan, Romansch, Gallo-Italian (Northern Italy), and many of the regional languages of northern France and Belgium collectively known as langues d'oïl (e.g. Walloon, Norman, Gallo, Picard, Bourguignon, and Poitevin).

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List of generic forms in place names in Ireland and the United Kingdom

The study of place names is called toponymy; for a more detailed examination of this subject in relation to British place names, refer to Toponymy in Great Britain.

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List of Indo-European languages

The Indo-European languages include some 439 (SIL estimate) languages and dialects spoken by about three billion people, including most of the major language families of Europe and western Asia, which belong to a single superfamily.

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List of ISO 639-1 codes

ISO 639 is a standardized nomenclature used to classify languages.

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List of ISO 639-2 codes

ISO 639 is a set of international standards that lists short codes for language names.

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List of Jewish ethnonyms

An ethnonym is the name applied to a given ethnic group.

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List of language names

This article is a resource of how to say the native name of most of the major languages in the world.

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List of language regulators

This is a list of bodies that regulate standard languages, often called language academies.

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List of languages by first written accounts

This is a list of languages arranged by the approximate dates of the oldest existing texts recording a complete sentence in the language.

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List of languages by time of extinction

This is a list of extinct languages sorted by their time of extinction.

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List of languages by type of grammatical genders

This article lists languages depending on their approach to grammatical gender.

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List of languages by writing system

Below is a list of languages sorted by writing system (by alphabetical order).

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List of last known speakers of languages

Any language is determined to be an extinct language when the last native or fluent speaker of that language dies.

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List of Latin-script alphabets

The tables below summarize and compare the letter inventory of some of the Latin-script alphabets.

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List of Latin-script digraphs

This is a list of digraphs used in various Latin alphabets.

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List of linguists

A linguist in the academic sense is a person who studies natural language (an academic discipline known as linguistics).

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List of multilingual countries and regions

This is an incomplete list of areas with either multilingualism at the community level or at the personal level.

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List of numbers in various languages

The following tables list the cardinal number names and symbols for the numbers 0 through 10 in various languages and scripts of the world.

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List of official languages by country and territory

This is a complete list of the official languages of countries and dependent territories of the world.

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List of people from Cardiff

Cardiff (Caerdydd) is the capital and largest city of Wales.

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List of places in Cornwall

This is a list of all the towns and villages in the ceremonial county of Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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List of redundant place names

A place name is tautological if two differently sounding parts of it are synonymous.

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List of revived languages

A revived language is one that, having experienced near or complete extinction as either a spoken or written language, has been intentionally revived and has regained some of its former status.

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List of river name etymologies

This page lists the various etymologies (origins) of the names of rivers around the world.

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List of television channels in Celtic languages

Celtic-language television channels are available in France, Ireland and the United Kingdom.

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List of United Kingdom county name etymologies

This toponymical list of counties of the United Kingdom is a list of the origins of the names of counties of the United Kingdom.

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List of Wikipedias

This is the list of the different language editions of Wikipedia; there are 301 Wikipedias of which 291 are active and 10 are not.

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Literary Welsh morphology

The morphology of the Welsh language shows many characteristics perhaps unfamiliar to speakers of English or continental European languages like French or German, but has much in common with the other modern Insular Celtic languages: Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Manx, Cornish, and Breton.

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Literature in the other languages of Britain

In addition to English, literature has been written in a wide variety of other languages in Britain, that is the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands (the Isle of Man and the Bailiwicks of Guernsey and Jersey are not part of the United Kingdom, but are closely associated with it, being British Crown Dependencies).

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Lizard (village)

Lizard (Often confused with the peninsular The Lizard) is a village on the Lizard peninsula in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Llangadwaladr, Powys

Llangadwaladr, formerly spelt Llancadwaladr in some sources, is an isolated mountain parish in Powys, Wales.

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Loch

Loch is the Irish, Scottish Gaelic and Scots word for a lake or for a sea inlet.

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Logan Rock

The Logan Rock (Men Omborth, meaning balanced stone) near the village of Treen in Cornwall, England, UK, is an example of a logan or rocking stone.

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Longevity myths

Longevity myths are traditions about long-lived people (generally supercentenarians), either as individuals or groups of people, and practices that have been believed to confer longevity, but for which scientific evidence does not support the ages claimed or the reasons for the claims.

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Longships

The Longships is the name given to a group of rocky islets situated approximately 1 miles (2 km) west of Land's End, Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Looe

Looe (Logh, "deep water inlet") is a small coastal town, fishing port and civil parish in south-east Cornwall, England, with a population of 5,280 at the 2011 census.

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Lostwithiel

Lostwithiel (Lostwydhyel) is a civil parish and small town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom at the head of the estuary of the River Fowey.

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Louis Lucien Bonaparte

Louis Lucien Bonaparte (4 January 1813 – 3 November 1891) was the third son of Napoleon's second surviving brother, Lucien Bonaparte.

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Loveday Carlyon

Loveday Carlyon is a Cornish nationalist politician.

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Loveday Jenkin

Loveday Jenkin is a Cornish politician, biologist and language campaigner.

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Ludgvan

Ludgvan (Lujuan) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, north-east of Penzance.

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Lugh

Lugh or Lug (Modern Irish: Lú) is an important god of Irish mythology.

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Lundy

Lundy is the largest island in the Bristol Channel.

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Lusty Glaze

Lusty Glaze (Lostyn Glas, meaning A place to view blue boats) is a beach in Newquay, Cornwall.

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Lyonesse

Lyonesse is a country in Arthurian legend, particularly in the story of Tristan and Iseult.

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Madron

Madron (Eglos Madern) is a civil parish and village in west Cornwall, Great Britain.

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Maker, Cornwall

Maker (Magor) is a village between Cawsand and Rame Head, Rame Peninsula, Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Manx language

No description.

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Maponos

In ancient Celtic religion, Maponos or Maponus ("Great Son") is a god of youth known mainly in northern Britain but also in Gaul.

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Margaret Steuart Pollard

Margaret Steuart "Peggy" Pollard, née Gladstone (1 March 1904 – 13 November 1996), was the great great-niece of Liberal prime minister William Gladstone.

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Mark of Cornwall

Mark of Cornwall (Latin Marcus, Cornish Margh, Welsh March, Breton Marc'h) was a king of Kernow (Cornwall) in the early 6th century.

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Mary Woodvine

Mary Louise Woodvine (born 14 November 1967) is a British television actress who appeared as Mary Harkinson in the BBC soap EastEnders in 2003.

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Mên Scryfa

Mên Scryfa (or Mên Scrifa, literally "stone with writing") is an inscribed standing stone in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Mên-an-Tol

The Mên-an-Tol (Cornish: Men an Toll) is a small formation of standing stones in Cornwall, England.

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Mebyon Kernow

Mebyon Kernow – The Party for Cornwall (MK; Cornish for Sons of Cornwall) is a Cornish nationalist, centre-left political party in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Media in Cornwall

The media in Cornwall has a long and distinct history.

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Mediæval Bæbes

The Mediæval Bæbes are a British musical ensemble founded in 1996 by Dorothy Carter and Katharine Blake.

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Medium of instruction

A medium of instruction (plural: usually mediums of instruction, but the archaic media of instruction is still used by some) is a language used in teaching.

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Melor

Melor (also known in Latin as Melorius; in Cornish as Mylor; in French as Méloir; and other variations) was a Breton saint who, in England, was venerated particularly in Wiltshire where he was titular of Amesbury Abbey, which claimed his relics.

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Meriadoc

Meriadoc is a name of Brittonic origin, corresponding to Meiriadog in medieval and modern Welsh, Meryasek (or similar spellings) in Cornish, and Meriadek in modern Breton.

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Meriasek

Saint Meriasek (Meriadeg) was a 4th-century Breton saint.

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Merrow

Merrow (from Irish murúch, Middle Irish murdúchann or murdúchu) is a mermaid or merman in Irish folklore.

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Mevagissey

Mevagissey (Lannvorek) is a village, fishing port and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Michael Everson

Michael Everson (born January 9, 1963) is an American and Irish linguist, script encoder, typesetter, font designer, and publisher.

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Michael Praed

Michael Praed (E-mail communication with Celeste Moore, webmaster of, michael-praed.com; 19 May 2007. (born 1 April 1960), real name Michael David Prince, is a British actor, probably best remembered for his role as Robin of Loxley in the British television series Robin of Sherwood, which attained cult status worldwide in the 1980s.

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Mick Paynter

Michael Kenneth (Mick) Paynter (born 1948, Cornwall, United Kingdom) is a retired Cornish civil servant, trade union activist, and poet.

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Minack Theatre

The Minack Theatre (Gwaryjy Minack) is an open-air theatre, constructed above a gully with a rocky granite outcrop jutting into the sea (minack from Cornish meynek means a stony or rocky place).

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Mining in Cornwall and Devon

Mining in Cornwall and Devon, in the south west of England, began in the early Bronze Age, around 2150 BC, and ended (at least temporarily) with the closure of South Crofty tin mine in Cornwall in 1998.

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Minority language

A minority language is a language spoken by a minority of the population of a territory.

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Minority language broadcasting

Minority language broadcasting comprises radio and television programmes for both national (including indigenous) and foreign minorities in their respective languages.

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Modern Cornish

Modern Cornish (Kernuack Nowedga) is a variety of the revived Cornish language.

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Montol Festival

The Montol Festival is an annual festival in Penzance, Cornwall, UK, held on the 21st of December each year since 2007.

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Mordred

Mordred or Modred (Medrawt) is a character in the Arthurian legend, known as a notorious traitor who fought King Arthur at the Battle of Camlann, where he was killed and Arthur was fatally wounded.

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Morgawr (folklore)

In Cornish folklore, the Morgawr (meaning sea giant in Cornish) is a sea serpent that purportedly inhabits the sea near Falmouth Bay, Cornwall, England.

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Mount's Bay

Mount's Bay (Baya an Garrek) is a large, sweeping bay on the English Channel coast of Cornwall, United Kingdom, stretching from the Lizard Point to Gwennap Head.

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Mousehole

Mousehole (Porthenys) is a village and fishing port in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Movyans Skolyow Meythrin

Movyans Skolyow Meythrin (MSM) (English: Nursery Schools Movement) is a not-for-profit organization set up by Rhisiart Tal-e-bot, who is also its current director, since 2009.

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Multinational state

A multinational state is a sovereign state that comprises two or more nations.

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Mundic

Mundic was used from the 1690s to describe a copper ore that began to be smelted at Bristol and elsewhere in southwestern Britain.

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Music of Cornwall

Cornwall is a Celtic nation and an English county.

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MV RMS Mulheim

The RMS Mülheim was a German cargo ship that was built in Romania and launched in May 1999.

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Myrddin Wyllt

Myrddin Wyllt (—"Myrddin the Wild") is a figure in medieval Welsh legend.

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Mystery play

Mystery plays and miracle plays (they are distinguished as two different forms although the terms are often used interchangeably) are among the earliest formally developed plays in medieval Europe.

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Name of Greece

The name of Greece differs in Greek compared with the names used for the country in other languages and cultures, just like the names of the Greeks.

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Names of Easter

The Christian holiday Easter has several names.

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Names of Germany

Because of Germany's geographic position in the centre of Europe, as well as its long history as a non-united region of distinct tribes and states, there are many widely varying names of Germany in different languages, perhaps more so than for any other European nation.

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Names of the days of the week

The names of the days of the week in many languages are derived from the names of the classical planets in Hellenistic astrology, which were in turn named after contemporary deities, a system introduced by the Roman Empire during Late Antiquity.

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Nancledra

Nancledra is a village in west Cornwall, England, UK.

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Nanpean

Nanpean (Cornish: Little Valley) is a village in the civil parish of St Stephen-in-Brannel in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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National Library of Wales

The National Library of Wales (Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru), Aberystwyth, is the national legal deposit library of Wales and is one of the Welsh Government sponsored bodies.

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Nemain

In Irish mythology, Neman or Nemain (modern spelling: Neamhan, Neamhain) is the spirit-woman or goddess who personifies the frenzied havoc of war.

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Newlyn

Newlyn (Lulyn: Lu 'fleet', Lynn/Lydn 'pool') is a seaside town and fishing port in south-west Cornwall, UK.

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News

News is information about current events.

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Nicholas Boson

Nicholas Boson (1624–1708) was a writer in, and preserver of, the Cornish language.

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Nicholas Williams

Nicholas Jonathan Anselm Williams (born October 1942 in Walthamstow, Essex, now London, UK), writing as Nicholas Williams or sometimes N.J.A. Williams, is a leading expert on the Cornish language.

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Nigel Haywood

Nigel Robert Haywood CVO (born 17 March 1955) is a British diplomat, who served as British ambassador to Estonia from 2003 until 2008 and Governor of the Falkland Islands from 2010 until 2014.

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Nigel Pengelly

Nigel Ian Pengelly (May 29, 1925 – July 3, 2010) was a provincial level politician from Alberta, Canada.

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Nine Maidens stone row

Nine Maidens stone row is an ancient monument in the parish of St Columb Major, Cornwall, England.

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Norse activity in the British Isles

Norse activity in the British Isles occurred during the Early Medieval period when members of the Norse populations of Scandinavia travelled to Britain and Ireland to settle, trade or raid.

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Oath of Allegiance (United Kingdom)

The Oath of Allegiance (Judicial or Official Oath) is a promise to be loyal to the British monarch, and his or her heirs and successors, sworn by certain public servants in the United Kingdom, and also by newly naturalised subjects in citizenship ceremonies.

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OCO

Oco or OCO may refer to.

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Ofis Publik ar Brezhoneg

The Public Office for the Breton Language (Ofis Publik ar Brezhoneg; Office Public de la langue bretonne) was established on 15 October 2010 as a public institution, with state and regional cooperation and funding, to promote and develop teaching and use of the Breton language in daily life.

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Ogo-dour Cove

Ogo-dour Cove is a small cove located at.

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Old English phonology

Old English phonology is necessarily somewhat speculative since Old English is preserved only as a written language.

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Ordinalia

The Ordinalia are three medieval mystery plays dating to the late fourteenth century, written primarily in Middle Cornish, with stage directions in Latin.

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Outline of Cornwall

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Cornwall: Cornwall – ceremonial county and unitary authority area of England within the United Kingdom.

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Outline of the United Kingdom

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; a sovereign state in Europe, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK), or Britain.

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Pan Celtic Festival

The Pan Celtic Festival (Féile Pan Cheilteach) is a Celtic-language music festival held annually in the week following Easter, since its inauguration in 1971.

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Pan-Celticism

Pan-Celticism (Pan-Chelteachas), also known as Celticism or Celtic nationalism is a political, social and cultural movement advocating solidarity and cooperation between Celtic nations (both the Gaelic and Brythonic branches) and the modern Celts in North-Western Europe.

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Parish Church of St Mary and St Petroc

The Parish Church of St Mary and St Petroc is a congregation of the Roman Catholic Church in Bodmin, Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Paschal greeting

The Paschal Greeting, also known as the Easter Acclamation, is an Easter custom among Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Eastern Catholic, and Anglicans Christians.

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Pasco (name)

Pasco is a Cornish form of the name Pascal that derives from the Latin paschalis or pashalis, which means "relating to Easter" from Latin Pascha ("Passover", i.e. the Easter Passover).

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Pascoe

Pascoe is a Cornish given name and surname which means "Easter children" from the Cornish language Pask, cognate of Latin Pascha ("Easter").

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Pascon agan Arluth

The anonymous poem Pascon agan Arluth is the oldest complete literary work in the Cornish language, dating from the 14th century.

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Pasty

A pasty or pastie (or, Pasti) is a baked pastry, a traditional variety of which is particularly associated with Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Paul (given name)

Paul is a common masculine given name in countries and ethnicities with a Christian heritage (Eastern Orthodoxy, Catholicism, Protestantism) and, beyond Europe, in Christian religious communities throughout the world.

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Paul, Cornwall

Paul (Breweni):. Cornish Language Partnership.

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Paul-Louis Rossi

Paul Louis Rossi (born 1933 Nantes, Brittany is a French critic and poet.

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Paynter

Paynter is a surname of British origin, which means "the head/end of the land" (penn an tir) in the Cornish language.

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Púca

The púca (Irish for spirit/ghost), pooka, phouka, phooka, phooca, puca or púka is primarily a creature of Celtic folklore.

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Pedn Vounder

Pedn Vounder is a tidal beach on the south coast of the Penwith peninsula, Cornwall, England, UK.

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Pelynt

Pelynt (Pluwnennys, Pluwnonna) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Pendarvis (Mineral Point, Wisconsin)

Pendarvis is a historic site located in Mineral Point, Iowa County, Wisconsin, United States.

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Pendoggett

Pendoggett (Penndewgos) is a village in the civil parish of St Kew, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Pendour Cove

Pendour Cove is a beach in west Cornwall, England, UK.

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Penix

Penix is a Cornish-language family name (Cornish surnames) originating in Cornwall.

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Penrose, Cornwall

Penrose (Cornish: Penros) is a house (in private ownership) and National Trust estate, east of Porthleven and in the civil parish of Sithney, Cornwall, England.

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Penryn

Penryn is a Cornish word meaning 'headland' that may refer to.

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Penryn College (South Africa)

Penryn is a co-educational, English-medium private school situated in Nelspruit, Mpumalanga, South Africa.

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Penwith

Penwith (Pennwydh) is an area of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, located on the peninsula of the same name.

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Penzance

Penzance (Pennsans) is a town, civil parish and port in Cornwall, in England, United Kingdom.

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Penzance railway station

Penzance railway station serves the town of Penzance in west Cornwall, England.

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Per Vari Kerloc'h

Per Vari Kerloc'h (born 1952) is the current Grand Druid of the Goursez Breizh (founded in 1899).

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Percuil River

The Percuil River is an estuary and stream draining the southern part of the Roseland Peninsula of Cornwall, UK and is one of three major tidal creeks of the River Fal.

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Perranporth

Perranporth (Porthperan) is a medium-sized seaside resort town on the north coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Peter (given name)

Peter is a common masculine given name.

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Peter Berresford Ellis

Peter Berresford Ellis (born 10 March 1943) is a historian, literary biographer, and novelist who has published over 98 books to date either under his own name or his pseudonyms Peter Tremayne and Peter MacAlan.

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Peter Birt

Peter Birt (– June 1791) was a businessman from Airmyn, Yorkshire, England, who made his fortune from the Aire and Calder Navigation and used part of his wealth to build the mansion named Wenvoe Castle.

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Peter Mundy

Peter Mundy (fl. 1600 – 1667) was a seventeenth-century British merchant trader, traveller and writer.

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Petrosomatoglyph

A petrosomatoglyph is a supposed image of parts of a human or animal body in rock.

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Pictish language

Pictish is the extinct language, or dialect, spoken by the Picts, the people of eastern and northern Scotland from the late Iron Age to the Early Middle Ages.

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Pixie

Pixie (also pixy, pixi, pizkie, piskie and pigsie as it is sometimes known in Cornwall) is a mythical creature of folklore.

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Place name origins

In much of the "Old World" (approximately Africa, Asia and Europe) the names of many places cannot easily be interpreted or understood; they do not convey any apparent meaning in the modern language of the area.

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Plain-an-Gwarry

Plain-an-Gwarry (Plen an Gwari) is a hamlet in the west of Redruth, Cornwall, England, UK.

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Plas

Plas (Anglicized Plass or Place) may refer to.

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Plen-an-gwary

A plen-an-gwarry or plain-an-gwary (Plen an Gwari), is a "playing-place" or round, a medieval amphitheatre found in Cornwall.

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Poldhu

Poldhu is a small area in south Cornwall, England, UK, situated on the Lizard Peninsula; it comprises Poldhu Point and Poldhu Cove.

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Polgigga

Polgigga (or Poljigga) is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, on the B3315 Land's End to Penzance road and within the civil parish of St Levan.

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Polperro

Polperro (Porthpyra, meaning Pyra's cove) is a large village, civil parish, and fishing harbour within the Polperro Heritage Coastline in south Cornwall, England.

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Polruan

Polruan (Porthruwan) is a small fishing village in the parish of Lanteglos-by-Fowey in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Porbeagle

The porbeagle (Lamna nasus) is a species of mackerel shark in the family Lamnidae, distributed widely in the cold and temperate marine waters of the North Atlantic and Southern Hemisphere.

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Port Quin

Port Quin (Porth Gwynn, meaning white cove) is a small cove and hamlet between Port Isaac and Polzeath in north Cornwall, England, UK.

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Porthcurno

Porthcurno (Porthkornow, meaning "Port (or Bay) of Cornwall") is a small village covering a small valley and beach on the south coast of Cornwall, England in the United Kingdom.

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Porthtowan

Porthtowan (Porth Tewyn, meaning cove of sand dunes) is a small village in Cornwall, England which is a popular summer tourist destination.

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Portuguese vocabulary

Most of the Portuguese vocabulary comes from Latin, because Portuguese is a Romance language.

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Prayer Book Rebellion

The Prayer Book Rebellion, Prayer Book Revolt, Prayer Book Rising, Western Rising or Western Rebellion (Rebellyans an Lyver Pejadow Kebmyn) was a popular revolt in Devon and Cornwall in 1549.

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Pre-stopped consonant

In linguistics, pre-stopping, also known as pre-occlusion or pre-plosion, is a phonological process involving the historical or allophonic insertion of a very short stop consonant before a sonorant, such as a short before a nasal or a lateral.

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Prideaux Castle

Prideaux Castle is a multivallate Iron Age hillfort situated atop a 133 m (435 ft) high conical hill near the southern boundary of the parish of Luxulyan, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Probus, Cornwall

Probus (Cornish: Lannbrobus) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, in the United Kingdom.

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Promontory fort

A promontory fort is a defensive structure located above a steep cliff, often only connected to the mainland by a small neck of land, thus utilizing the topography to reduce the ramparts needed.

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Prophecy of Merlin

Prophecy of Merlin (Prophetia Merlini), sometimes called The Prophecy of Ambrosius Merlin concerning the Seven Kings, is a 12th-century poem written in Latin hexameters by John of Cornwall, which he claimed was based or revived from a lost manuscript in the Cornish language.

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Proposed top-level domain

The Domain Name System of the Internet consists of a set of top-level domains which constitute the root domain of the hierarchical name space and database.

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Proto-Celtic language

The Proto-Celtic language, also called Common Celtic, is the reconstructed ancestor language of all the known Celtic languages.

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Proto-Indo-European language

Proto-Indo-European (PIE) is the linguistic reconstruction of the hypothetical common ancestor of the Indo-European languages, the most widely spoken language family in the world.

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Proto-Indo-European particles

The particles of the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) have been reconstructed by modern linguists based on similarities found across all Indo-European languages.

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Proto-Slavic borrowings

Numerous lexemes that are reconstructible for the Proto-Slavic language have been identified as borrowings from the languages of various tribes that Proto-Slavic speakers came into contact with, either in prehistorical times or during their expansion when they first appeared in history in the 6th century (the Common Slavic period).

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Pseudoarchaeology of Cornwall

The pseudoarchaeology of Cornwall concerns aspects of the study of Cornwall that fall outside mainstream archaeology, history, and cultural studies.

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Q

Q (named cue) is the 17th letter of the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet.

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Quethiock

Quethiock (Koosek, meaning forested place) is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, roughly five miles east of Liskeard.

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Radio St Austell Bay

Radio St Austell Bay (RSAB, often incorrectly called St Austell Bay Radio) is a non-profit, community radio station.

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Radyo an Gernewegva

Radyo an Gernewegva (abbreviated as RanG; meaning in English 'radio of the Cornish-speaking area') is a radio service broadcasting through the medium of the Cornish language both online, via podcast, and on several community radio stations in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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Ralph Dunstan

Ralph Dunstan (b. 17 Nov 1857; d. 2 Apr 1933) was born at Carnon Downs in the parish of Feock, Cornwall and is buried at Perranzabuloe.

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Reeth

Reeth is a village about 11 miles west of Richmond in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire, England, located within the civil parish of Reeth, Fremington and Healaugh.

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Regional language

A regional language is a language spoken in an area of a sovereign state, whether it be a small area, a federal state or province, or some wider area.

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Restormel

Restormel (Rostorrmel) was a borough of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, one of the six administrative divisions that made up the county.

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Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament

The Revived Cornish Stannary Parliament (Cornish: Seneth an Stenegow Kernow), is a pressure group which claimed to be a revival of the historic Cornish Stannary Parliament last held in 1753.

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Rhisiart Tal-e-bot

Rhisiart Tal-e-bot (born Richard Stewart Talbot, Merthyr Tydfil, 1975) is a Welsh activist, Early Years lecturer and language expert who has been General Secretary of the Celtic League since 2006 and editor of Carn magazine since 2013.

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Richard

The Germanic first or given name Richard derives from German, French, and English "ric" (ruler, leader, king, powerful) and "hard" (strong, brave, hardy), and it therefore means "strong in rule".

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Richard Gendall

Richard Gendall was a British expert on the Cornish language, born in 1924, died September 2017 aged 93 He was the founder of "Modern Cornish"/Curnoack Nowedga, which split off during the 1980s.

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Richard Jenkin

Richard Garfield Jenkin (9 October 1925 – 29 October 2002), was a Cornish politician who was involved with Cornish nationalism projects as one of the founder members of the Cornish political party Mebyon Kernow.

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Richard Rufus of Cornwall

Richard Rufus (Ricardus Rufus, "Richard the Red") was a Cornish Franciscan scholastic philosopher and theologian.

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Richard Rutt

Cecil Richard Rutt CBE (27 August 1925 – 27 July 2011) was an English Roman Catholic priest and a former Anglican bishop.

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Riddle drum

A riddle drum is a makeshift frame drum used in traditional English folk music.

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Ringfort

Ringforts, ring forts or ring fortresses are circular fortified settlements that were mostly built during the Bronze age up to about the year 1000.

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River Camel

The River Camel (Dowr Kammel, meaning crooked river) is a river in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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River Fal

The River Fal (Dowr Fala) flows through Cornwall, England, rising at Pentevale on Goss Moor (between St. Columb and Roche) and reaching the English Channel at Falmouth.

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River Fowey

The River Fowey (Fowi) is a river in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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River Glen, Lincolnshire

The River Glen is a river in Lincolnshire, England with a short stretch passing through Rutland near Essendine.

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River Lerryn

The River Lerryn is a river in east Cornwall, England, UK, a tributary of the River Fowey.

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River Parrett

The River Parrett flows through the counties of Dorset and Somerset in South West England, from its source in the Thorney Mills springs in the hills around Chedington in Dorset.

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River Plym

The River Plym is a river in Devon, England.

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River Severn

The River Severn (Afon Hafren, Sabrina) is a river in the United Kingdom.

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Robert Morton Nance

Robert Morton Nance (1873–1959) was a leading authority on the Cornish language, nautical archaeologist, and joint founder of the Old Cornwall Society.

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Robert Walling

Robert Victor Walling (1895–1976) was a Cornish soldier, journalist, and poet.

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Rock-cut basin

A rock-cut basin, in this usage of the term, is a natural phenomenon.

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Rocking stone

Rocking stones (also known as logan stones or logans) are large stones that are so finely balanced that the application of just a small force causes them to rock.

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Rod Lyon

Rod Lyon was born in Cornwall and trained as a civil engineer.

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Roman Britain

Roman Britain (Britannia or, later, Britanniae, "the Britains") was the area of the island of Great Britain that was governed by the Roman Empire, from 43 to 410 AD.

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Rootschat

RootsChat is a free online genealogy forum for researching family history through collaboration.

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Rooz (album)

Rooz (Red) is third album by Cornish folk band Dalla.

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Rosedinnick

Rosedinnick is a small hamlet in Cornwall, England.

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Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam

Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám is the title that Edward FitzGerald gave to his 1859 translation of a selection of quatrains (rubāʿiyāt) attributed to Omar Khayyam (1048–1131), dubbed "the Astronomer-Poet of Persia".

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Rugby union in Cornwall

Rugby union in Cornwall is one of the county's most popular sports and has a large following in Cornwall.

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Saale

The Saale, also known as the Saxon Saale (Sächsische Saale) and Thuringian Saale (Thüringische Saale), is a river in Germany and a left-bank tributary of the Elbe.

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Saint Kea

Saint Kea (Breton and Cornish: Ke; Ké) was a late 5th-century British saint from the Hen Ogledd ("Old North")—the Brythonic-speaking parts of what is now southern Scotland and northern England.

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Saint Mungo

Kentigern (Cyndeyrn Garthwys; Kentigernus), known as Mungo, was an apostle of the Scottish Kingdom of Strathclyde in the late 6th century, and the founder and patron saint of the city of Glasgow.

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Saint Piran

Saint Piran or Pyran (Peran, Piranus), died c. 480,. Oecumenical Patriarchate, Archdiocese of Thyateira and Great Britain.

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Saint Teilo

Saint Teilo (Teliarus or Teliavus; TeliauWainewright, John. "" in The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. XIV. Robert Appleton Co. (New York), 1912. Accessed 20 Jul 2013. or Telo; Télo or Théleau; – 9 February), also known by his Cornish name Eliud, was a British Christian monk, bishop, and founder of monasteries and churches from Penalun (Penally) near Tenby in Pembrokeshire, south Wales.

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Sarah Newton

Sarah Louise Newton, (born Sarah Louise Hick, 19 July 1961) is a British Conservative Party politician.

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Saxons

The Saxons (Saxones, Sachsen, Seaxe, Sahson, Sassen, Saksen) were a Germanic people whose name was given in the early Middle Ages to a large country (Old Saxony, Saxonia) near the North Sea coast of what is now Germany.

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Scantlebury

Scantlebury is an English surname originating from the West Country, and most likely from Devon and Cornwall.

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Scotland in the Early Middle Ages

Scotland was divided into a series of kingdoms in the early Middle Ages, i.e. between the end of Roman authority in southern and central Britain from around 400 CE and the rise of the kingdom of Alba in 900 CE.

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Scotland in the Middle Ages

Scotland in the Middle Ages concerns the history of Scotland from the departure of the Romans to the adoption of major aspects of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century.

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Scott Mann (politician)

Scott Leslie Mann (born 24 June 1977) is a British Conservative politician.

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Scottish island names

The modern names of Scottish islands stem from two main influences.

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Seaton, Cornwall

Seaton (Sethyn, meaning little arrow after the river) is a village on the south coast of Cornwall, England, at the mouth of the River Seaton three miles (5 km) east of Looe and ten miles (16 km) west of Plymouth.

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Seth Lakeman

Seth Bernard Lakeman (born 26 March 1977) is an English folk singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist, who is most often associated with the fiddle and tenor guitar, but also plays the viola and banjo.

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Sir James Smith's School

Sir James Smith's Community School (formerly Sir James Smith's School) is a small secondary school located in the town of Camelford, North Cornwall, England.

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Sirona

In Celtic polytheism, Sirona was a goddess worshipped predominantly in East Central Gaul and along the Danubian limes.

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Skol Veythrin Karenza

Skol Veythrin Karenza (SVK), set up by Movyans Skolyow Meythrin in 2013, is the first full-time Cornish language nursery school with Ofsted registered status.

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Smith (surname)

Smith is a surname originating in England.

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Source FM

Source FM is a community radio station, for the combined Falmouth and Penryn community and the wider area.

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Souterrain

Souterrain (from French sous terrain, meaning "under ground") is a name given by archaeologists to a type of underground structure associated mainly with the European Atlantic Iron Age.

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South Australian English

South Australian English is the variety of English spoken in the Australian state of South Australia.

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South Hams

South Hams is a local government district on the south coast of Devon, England.

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South West England

South West England is one of nine official regions of England.

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Southwestern Brittonic languages

The Southwestern Brittonic languages are the Brittonic Celtic tongues spoken in South West England and Brittany since the Early Middle Ages.

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Speaker types

Within the linguistic study of endangered languages, sociolinguists distinguish between different speaker types based on the type of competence they have acquired of the endangered language.

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Sperris Quoit

Sperris Quoit is a ruined megalithic burial chamber or dolmen, and one of a type of tomb unique to West Penwith, located on a moor around 365 metres northeast of Zennor Quoit, being roughly halfway between Zennor and Amalveor, Cornwall.

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Spot (franchise)

Spot is a yellow puppy character created by Eric Hill, an English author and illustrator of children's picture books.

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Springside, Ayrshire

The village of Springside is in North Ayrshire, Parish of Dreghorn, Scotland.

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St Agnes, Cornwall

St Agnes (Breanek) is a civil parish and a large village on the north coast of Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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St Breock Downs Monolith

St Breock Downs Monolith (or St Breock Longstone; Cornish: Men Gurta) is the largest and heaviest prehistoric standing stone in Cornwall, England.

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St Bridget's Church, Morvah

St Bridget's Church, Morvah is a parish church in the Church of England Diocese of Truro located in Morvah, Cornwall, UK.

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St Buryan

St Buryan (Pluwveryan) is a civil parish and village in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St Columb Major

St Columb Major (S.) is a civil parish and town in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St Just in Penwith

St Just (Lannust) is a town and civil parish in the Penwith district of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St Levan

St Levan (Selevan) is a civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St Mary's, Isles of Scilly

St Mary's (Ennor the mainland) is the largest and most populous island of the Isles of Scilly, an archipelago off the southwest coast of Cornwall in England.

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St Mellion International Resort

The St Mellion International Resort, in the parish of St Mellion, near Saltash, is a hotel with recreational facilities, situated in south east Cornwall.

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St Michael's Mount

St Michael's Mount (Karrek Loos yn Koos, meaning "hoar rock in woodland") is a small tidal island in Mount's Bay, Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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St Pol de Léon's Church, Paul

St Pol de Léon's Church, Paul also known as Paul Parish Church is a parish church in the Church of England Diocese of Truro located in Paul, Cornwall, UK.

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St Senara's Church, Zennor

St Senara's Church, or The Church of Saint Senara, in Zennor Churchtown, Cornwall, England, UK, is the parish church of the parish of Zennor.

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St Uny's Church, Lelant

St Uny's Church, Lelant, is the Church of England parish church of Lelant, Cornwall, England.

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Stan Palk

Stanley Palk (28 October 1921 – 12 October 2009) was an English footballer.

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Standard Written Form

The Standard Written Form or SWF (Furv Skrifys Savonek) of the Cornish language is an orthography standard that is designed to "provide public bodies and the educational system with a universally acceptable, inclusive, and neutral orthography".

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Stannary

The word stannary is historically applied to.

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Stargazy pie

Stargazy pie (sometimes called starrey gazey pie, stargazey pie and other variants) is a Cornish dish made of baked pilchards (or sardines), along with eggs and potatoes, covered with a pastry crust.

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Stateless nation

A stateless nation is a political term for an ethnic group or nation that does not possess its own stateDictionary Of Public Administration, U.C. Mandal, Sarup & Sons 2007, 505 p. and is not the majority population in any nation state.

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Stephen Bosustow

Stephen Reginald Bosustow (November 6, 1911 in Victoria, British Columbia – July 4, 1981) was a Canadian-born American film producer from 1943 until his retirement in 1979.

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Stevyn Colgan

Stevyn Colgan (born 11 August 1961) is a British writer, artist and speaker.

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Street, Somerset

Street is a large village and civil parish in the county of Somerset, England.

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Sumorsaete

The Sumorsaete were an Anglo-Saxon group living in what is now Somerset, presumably around the town of Somerton.

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Sun dog

A sun dog (or sundog) or mock sun, formally called a parhelion (plural parhelia) in meteorology, is an atmospheric optical phenomenon that consists of a bright spot to the left or right of the Sun.

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Sweet Nightingale

Sweet Nightingale, also known as Down in those valleys below, is a Cornish folk song.

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Talkin

Talkin is a village in Cumbria, England situated close to Talkin Tarn.

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Talkin Tarn

Talkin Tarn is a glacial lake and country park near Brampton, Cumbria, England.

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Talskiddy

Talskiddy is a small rural village about two miles north of St Columb Major in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Tarvos Trigaranus

Tarvos Trigaranus or Taruos Trigaranos is a divine figure who appears on a relief panel of the Pillar of the Boatmen as a bull with three cranes perched on his back.

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T–V distinction

In sociolinguistics, a T–V distinction (from the Latin pronouns tu and vos) is a contrast, within one language, between various forms of addressing one's conversation partner or partners that are specialized for varying levels of politeness, social distance, courtesy, familiarity, age or insult toward the addressee.

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Tehidy

Tehidy is an historic manor in the parish of Illogan in Cornwall, England, located on the north coast of Cornwall, far to the west of that county, about two miles north of Camborne, two miles west of Redruth, and about a mile south of the harbour at Portreath.

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Terminology of the British Isles

The terminology of the British Isles refers to the various words and phrases that are used to describe the different (and sometimes overlapping) geographical and political areas of the islands of Great Britain, Ireland, and the smaller islands which surround them.

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Tesyn

Tesyn is a type of smoked Goat's milk cheese from Cornwall in the United Kingdom.

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The Brome play of Abraham and Isaac

The Brome play of Abraham and Isaac (also known as The Brome “Abraham and Isaac”, The Brome Abraham, and The Sacrifice of Isaac) is a fifteenth-century play of unknown authorship, written in an East Anglian dialect of Middle English, which dramatises the story of the Akedah, the binding of Isaac.

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The Carracks

The Carracks (Kerrek, meaning rocks) and Little Carracks (Karrek an Ydhyn, meaning rock of the birds) are a group of small rocky inshore islands off the Atlantic north coast of west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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The House on the Strand

The House on the Strand is a novel by Daphne du Maurier.

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The Hurlers (stone circles)

The Hurlers (Cornish: An Hurlysi) is a group of three stone circles in the civil parish of St Cleer, Cornwall, England, UK.

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The Merry Maidens

The Merry Maidens, also known as Dawn's Men (a likely corruption of the Cornish Dans Maen "Stone Dance") is a late neolithic stone circle located 2 miles (3 km) to the south of the village of St Buryan, in Cornwall, United Kingdom.

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The Protectorate

The Protectorate was the period during the Commonwealth (or, to monarchists, the Interregnum) when England and Wales, Ireland and Scotland were governed by a Lord Protector as a republic.

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The Song of the Western Men

"The Song of the Western Men", also known as "Trelawny", is a Cornish patriotic song, written in its modern form by Robert Stephen Hawker in 1824, but having roots in older folk songs.

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Thomas Boson

Thomas Boson (1635–1719) was a writer in the Cornish language and the cousin of Nicholas and John Boson.

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Thomson and Thompson

Thomson and Thompson (Dupond et Dupont) are fictional characters in The Adventures of Tintin, the comics series by Belgian cartoonist Hergé.

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Tim Saunders

Tim Saunders is a Cornish language poet who also writes poetry and journalism in the Welsh, Irish, Breton and Cornish languages.

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Timeline of Cornish history

This timeline summarizes significant events in the History of Cornwall.

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Timeline of the English Reformation

This is a timeline of the Protestant Reformation in England.

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Tin

Tin is a chemical element with the symbol Sn (from stannum) and atomic number 50.

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Toast (honor)

A toast is a ritual in which a drink is taken as an expression of honor or goodwill.

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Todpool

Todpool is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Tom Bawcock

Tom Bawcock is a legendary character from the village of Mousehole, Cornwall, England.

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Toponymy of England

The toponymy of England, like the English language itself, derives from various linguistic origins.

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Torpoint

Torpoint (Penntorr) is a civil parish and town on the Rame Peninsula in southeast Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Towednack

Towednack (Tewydnek) is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Tradition

A tradition is a belief or behavior passed down within a group or society with symbolic meaning or special significance with origins in the past.

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Translations of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Lewis Carroll’s Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has been translated into 174 languages.

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Translations of The Hobbit

J. R. R. Tolkien's The Hobbit has been translated into many languages.

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Translations of Through the Looking-Glass

Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There has been translated into 65 languages.

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Tre, Pol and Pen

The phrase Tre, Pol and Pen is used to describe people from or places in Cornwall, UK.

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Treen Cove

Treen Cove is a tidal beach on the north coast of the Penwith peninsula, Cornwall, England, UK.

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Tremain

Tremain is a Cornish language surname.

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Tremaine

Tremaine is a Cornish language given or surname.

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Tremar Coombe

Tremar Coombe is a small hamlet situated in the former Caradon District north of Liskeard in Cornwall.

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Tremayne

Tremayne is a Cornish language surname.

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Tresillian

Tresillian (Tresulyan) is a small village in mid Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Tresillian House, St Newlyn East

Tresillian House is a country house near St Newlyn East, off the A3058 road, Cornwall, England.

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Trethowan

Trethowan is a Cornish surname, found both in Cornwall and amongst members of the Cornish diaspora.

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Trevarno, Cornwall

Trevarno is a private country estate in south-west Cornwall, England, UK, near the village of Crowntown, north-east of Helston.

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Trevarno, Livermore, California

Trevarno, California is a section of Livermore, Alameda County, California, built by a Cornish company, based at Trevarno, near Helston, manufacturing safety fuses.

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Trevescan

Trevescan is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Trevorrow

Trevorrow is a Cornish surname originating in the Cornish language and may refer to.

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Trewartha

Trewartha and Andrewartha are Cornish family names (and placename, Dexter).

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Tristan

Tristan (Latin & Brythonic: Drustanus; Trystan), also known as Tristram, is a Cornish knight of the Round Table and the hero of the Arthurian Tristan and Iseult story.

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Troyl

Troyl is a colloquial Cornish word meaning a barn-dance or céilidh, a social evening of dance, music and song.

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Truro

Truro (Truru) is a city and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Turned A

Turned A (capital: Ɐ, lowercase: ɐ, math symbol ∀) is a symbol based upon the letter A. Lowercase ɐ (in two story form) is used in the International Phonetic Alphabet to identify the near-open central vowel.

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Unified Cornish

Unified Cornish (UC) (Kernewek Unys, KU) is a variety of the Cornish language of the Cornish revival.

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United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom (UK) or Britain,Usage is mixed with some organisations, including the and preferring to use Britain as shorthand for Great Britain is a sovereign country in western Europe.

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Veor Cove

Veor Cove is a beach in Cornwall, UK.

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Verb–subject–object

In linguistic typology, a verb–subject–object (VSO) language is one in which the most typical sentences arrange their elements in that order, as in Ate Sam oranges (Sam ate oranges).

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Veryan

Veryan (Cornish: Elerghi) is a coastal civil parish and village on the Roseland Peninsula in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Vocative case

The vocative case (abbreviated) is the case used for a noun that identifies a person (animal, object etc.) being addressed or occasionally the determiners of that noun.

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Voiceless dental fricative

The voiceless dental non-sibilant fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in some spoken languages.

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Voiceless labialized velar approximant

The voiceless labialized velar (labiovelar) approximant (traditionally called a voiceless labiovelar fricative) is a type of consonantal sound, used in spoken languages.

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Vortigern

Vortigern (Old Welsh Guorthigirn, Guorthegern; Gwrtheyrn; Wyrtgeorn; Old Breton Gurdiern, Gurthiern; Foirtchern; Vortigernus, Vertigernus, Uuertigernus, etc), also spelled Vortiger, Vortigan, and Vortigen, was possibly a 5th-century warlord in Britain, known perhaps as a king of the Britons, at least connoted as such in the writings of Bede.

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Vug

A vug, vugh, or vugg is a small to medium-sized cavity inside rock.

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W

W (named double-u,Pronounced plural double-ues) is the 23rd letter of the modern English and ISO basic Latin alphabets.

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Wales

Wales (Cymru) is a country that is part of the United Kingdom and the island of Great Britain.

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Walkers are Welcome

The Walkers are Welcome scheme is a community-led initiative operating in England, Scotland and Wales.

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Welsh Language Board

The Welsh Language Board (Bwrdd yr Iaith Gymraeg) was a statutory body set up by Her Majesty's Government under the Welsh Language Act 1993.

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Welsh toponymy

The placenames of Wales derive in most cases from the Welsh language, but have also been influenced by linguistic contact with the Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, Anglo-Normans and modern English.

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West Country English

West Country English is one of the English language varieties and accents used by much of the native population of South West England, the area sometimes popularly known as the West Country.

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Western Brittonic languages

Western Brittonic languages comprise two dialects into which Common Brittonic split during the Early Middle Ages; its counterpart was the ancestor of the Southwestern Brittonic languages.

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Western Europe

Western Europe is the region comprising the western part of Europe.

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Wharf

A wharf, quay (also), staith or staithe is a structure on the shore of a harbor or on the bank of a river or canal where ships may dock to load and unload cargo or passengers.

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Wheal

Wheal may refer to.

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White British

White British is an ethnicity classification used in the 2011 United Kingdom Census.

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White Island, Isles of Scilly

White Island (Ar Nor, facing the mainland) is one of the larger unpopulated islands of the Isles of Scilly, part of the United Kingdom, and lies off the coast of the northernmost populated island of the group, St Martin's, to which it is joined by a tidal causeway, or isthmus.

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White people

White people is a racial classification specifier, used mostly for people of European descent; depending on context, nationality, and point of view, the term has at times been expanded to encompass certain persons of North African, Middle Eastern, and South Asian descent, persons who are often considered non-white in other contexts.

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Whitley Stokes

Whitley Stokes, CSI, CIE, FBA (28 February 1830 – 13 April 1909) was an Irish lawyer and Celtic scholar.

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Wild West (TV series)

Wild West is a situation comedy screened from October 2002 until 2004 (12 episodes) starring Dawn French and Catherine Tate.

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Wilfred Bennetto

Wilfred Melville Bennetto (1902–1994) was a Cornish poet and novelist.

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Will Coleman (storyteller)

Will Coleman is a Cornish film-maker, author, musician and educational consultant.

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William Borlase

William Borlase (2 February 1696 – 31 August 1772), Cornish antiquary, geologist and naturalist.

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William Golding

Sir William Gerald Golding CBE (19 September 1911 – 19 June 1993) was a British novelist, playwright, and poet.

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William Gwavas

William Gwavas (1676–1741) was an English barrister and writer in the Cornish language.

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William Jordan (writer)

William Jordan (fl. 1611), Cornish dramatist, lived at Helston in Cornwall, and is supposed to have been the author of the Cornish language mystery or sacred drama Gwreans an Bys: the Creacon of the World.

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William Pryce

William Pryce (baptised 1735–1790) was a British medical man, known as an antiquary and writer on mining in Cornwall.

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William Scawen

William Scawen (1600–1689) was one of the pioneers in the revival of the Cornish language.

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William Watkin Edward Wynne

William Watkin Edward Wynne (23 December 1801 – 9 June 1880) was a Welsh Member of Parliament and antiquarian.

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Withiel

Withiel (Egloswydhyel) is a civil parish and village in mid Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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Withielgoose

Withielgoose or Withel-goose is a hamlet in Cornwall, England, UK.

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Wrasse

The wrasses are a family, Labridae, of marine fish, many of which are brightly colored.

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Y

Y (named wye, plural wyes) is the 25th and penultimate letter in the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet.

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Y Dydd Olaf (album)

Y Dydd Olaf is the first solo album by Welsh singer-songwriter Gwenno.

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Y Gododdin

Y Gododdin is a medieval Welsh poem consisting of a series of elegies to the men of the Brittonic kingdom of Gododdin and its allies who, according to the conventional interpretation, died fighting the Angles of Deira and Bernicia at a place named Catraeth circa AD 600.

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Yan Tan Tethera

Yan Tan Tethera is a sheep-counting rhyme/system traditionally used by shepherds in Northern England and earlier in some other parts of Britain.

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Yogh

The letter yogh (ȝogh) (Ȝ ȝ; Middle English: ȝogh) was used in Middle English and Older Scots, representing y and various velar phonemes.

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Zennor

Zennor is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.

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14th century in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in the 14th century.

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1504 in literature

This article presents a list of literary events and publications during 1504.

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1540s in England

Events from the 1540s in England.

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1676 in England

Events from the year 1676 in England.

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1676 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1676.

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16th century in literature

This article presents lists of literary events and publications in the 16th century.

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1741 in literature

This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1741.

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1777

No description.

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1777 in Great Britain

Events from the year 1777 in Great Britain.

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Redirects here:

Cnx (ISO code), Cornish Language, Cornish-language, Curnoack, ISO 639:cnx, ISO 639:cor, ISO 639:kw, ISO 639:oco, KERNEWEK, Kernewek, Kernowak, Kernowek, Kernuack, Late Cornish, Middle Cornish, Middle Cornish language, Oco (ISO code), Old Cornish, Old Cornish language.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornish_language

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