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Gaston Dorren, “LINGO: Around Europe in 60 Languages”, 2015.

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Here I present: Gaston Lorren, “LINGO: Around Europe in 60 Languages”, 2015.

INTRODUCTION.

There are over  250 languages in Europe, and most belong to the Indo-European linguistic phylum. Three (3) Indo­-European subphylum’s: Germanic, Slavic & Romance account for most of the speakers of  European languages.

Gaston Dorren, “LINGO: Around Europe in 60 Languages”, 2015 is divided into nine (9) parts.  The “table of contents” of the book is shown BELOW.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 PART ONE: Next of tongue; languages and their families.

1 The life of PIE | Lithuanian.

2 The separated siblings | Finno-Ugric Languages.

3 Pieces of a broken pitcher | Romansh.

4 Mother dearest | French.

5 Know your Slovek from your Slovane | Slavic language.

6 The linguistic orphanage | Balkan languages.

 7 The tenth branch | Ossetian.

PART TWO: Past perfect discontinuous; languages and their history.

8 The peaceful expansionist? | German.

9 Portugal’s mother’s tongue | Galician.

10 A language in DK | Danish.

11 The spoils of defeat | Channel Island Norman.

12 Languages of exile | Karaim, Ladino and Yiddish.

13 Frozen in time | Icelandic.

PART THREE: War and peace; languages and politics.

14 The democratic language | Norwegian.

15 Two addresses to the people of Belarus | Belarus(s)ian.

16 Kleinsteinish and its neighbours | Luxembourgish.

17 Longing for languagehood | Scots and Frisian.

18 Much a-du about you, and him | Swedish.

19 Four countries – and more than a club | Catalan.

20 Four languages and zero goodwill | Serbo-Croatian.

PART FOUR: Werds, wirds, wurds; written and spoken.

21 ‘Háček!’ – ‘Bless you’ | Czech..

22 Szczęsny, Pszkit and Korzeniowski | Polish.

23 Broad and slender tweets | Scots Gaelic.

24 Learning your A to Я | Russian.

25 Pin the name on the language | Following the clues.

26 The Iberian machine gun | Spanish.

27 Mountains of dialects | Slovene.

28 Hide and speak? | Shelta and Anglo-Romani.

PART FIVE: Nuts and bolts; languages and their vocabulary.

29 Export/Import | Greek.

30 Arrival in Porto | Portuguese.

31 Meet the Snorbs | Sorbian.

32 From our Vašingtona correspondent | Latvian.

33 Small, sweet, slim, sturdy, sexy, stupid little women | Italian.

34 A snowstorm in a teacup | Sami.

35 Deciphering the language of numbers | Breton.

PART SIX: Talking by the book; languages and their grammar.

36 Gender-bending | Dutch.

37 A case history | Romani.

38 A much-needed merger | Bulgarian-Slovak.

39 Nghwm starts with a C | Welsh.

40 Strictly ergative | Basque.

41 Note to self | Ukrainian.

PART SEVEN: Intensive care; languages on the brink and beyond.

42 Networking in Monaco | Monégasque.

43 A narrow escape | Irish.

44 No laughing matter | Gagauz.

45 The death of a language | Dalmatian.

46 The church of Kernow | Cornish.

47 Back from the brink | Manx.

PART EIGHT: Movers and shakers; linguists who left their mark.

48 Ĺudovít Štúr, the hero linguist | Slovak.

49 The father of Albanology | Albanian.

50 An unexpected standard | Germanic languages.

51 The no-hoper | Esperanto.

52 The national hero who wasn’t | Macedonian.

53 A godless alphabet | Turkish.

PART NINE: Warts and all; linguistic portrait studies.

54 Spell as you speak | Finnish.

55 Romans north of Hadrian’s Wall | Faroese.

56 A meaningful silence | Sign languages.

57 | Armenian.

58 Plain lonely | Hungarian.

59 An Afro-Asiatic in Europe | Maltese.

60 The global headache | English.

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