From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alastair
Burr
Sent: Saturday, May 19, 2012 2:03 PM
To: RBASE-L Mailing List
Subject: [RBASE-L] - Re: Difference between "select into" and "setvar"
Bernie,
Perhaps if you’d used an S instead of a Z I wouldn’t have turned purple
with rage <g> – I always had the impression that we invented the language
this side of the pond so you lot really ought to use the correct spelling
<g>.
(And, yes, I do know that I’m taking liberties with where the origins were
but only for comic effect!! And you can spell it how you like for all I
care. Besides which, Dennis probably just had little wayward piggies on
his keybroad.)
Regards,
Alastair – in England – where English comes from!!
"where English comes from!!" ?
Most English words have come from four other languages: Anglo-Saxon, French,
Latin and Ancient Greek. The language spoken in Britain in the first century
B.C. would have been a Celtic language, similar to the Gaelic languages that
are still spoken today in Ireland, Wales, Scotland and Brittany in northwest
France. During the first century A.D. Britain was ruled by the Romans, who
brought with them their own language, Latin. Celts and Romans lived together
and their two languages probably influenced each other for the next 300
years.
--- RBASE-L
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