Steven Feeney

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They would have used Latin for commerce and education, and their own language for love, home, and hearthside stories. That language was Brythonic, the ancestor of the Welsh language, once spoken from the tip of Cornwall to the mountains of Scotland (not that either place was named as such back then). Its sister tongue, Goidelic, or Old Irish was spoken across the sea, to the west.
Britannic Myths
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