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Post by eufrenio on Jan 24, 2006 15:19:42 GMT -5
4. Italy 5. Sweden
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fred
Junior Member
Posts: 52
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Post by fred on Jan 24, 2006 15:24:34 GMT -5
1) Dutch?
4) Belgians?
5) Germans?
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Post by eastanglian on Jan 24, 2006 16:07:40 GMT -5
Could 4 be Italian and 5 Dutch? Yep you've got the last 2 They are 1)England (Leeds) 2)France (Toulouse) 3)Spain (Madrid) 4) Italy (Legnano - Milan) 5)Holland (Utrecht)
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Post by quarryman on Jan 24, 2006 16:19:09 GMT -5
Hooray!
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TonyP
New Member
Posts: 18
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Post by TonyP on Jan 27, 2006 19:03:46 GMT -5
This is just so utterly pointless - this is meant to be a forum for discussing human variation in an intelligent manner - not reducing it all down to guessing games! Why waste so much time on drivel like this. Anyone with half a brain knows that you go back two, three, four.... generations back to most of the Euro population and you will find people have ancestors from all over place - yeah, there are some generalisations but this crude pigeonholing of people by facial appearance is bollocks. My kids are a mix of Sicilian, Italian, English, Irish, Welsh, Flemish ..... etc. whatever. What does that make them? The only people who go on about being "pure" are usually inbred yokels.
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Post by asdf on Jan 27, 2006 19:07:42 GMT -5
Yeah, right. I forgot. Europe's just like America and the UK. No one knows their ancestors and everyone's as miscegenated as everyone in your world.
K, thanks.
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Post by quarryman on Jan 27, 2006 23:33:12 GMT -5
It might seem pointless, but it's fun.
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TonyP
New Member
Posts: 18
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Post by TonyP on Jan 28, 2006 4:07:03 GMT -5
Yeah, right. I forgot. Europe's just like America and the UK. No one knows their ancestors and everyone's as miscegenated as everyone in your world. K, thanks. What world is that?.... the REAL world. The point is that if you do bother to look into your family history you will find a record of people that reflect movements of people due to economic, social and environmental factors... eg. quite a few people in the part of England that I live have Dutch (people draining the Fens and other trades) and Flemish (weavers) in their family history and a number of local surnames are just Anglicised versions of Dutch/Flemish names.
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TonyP
New Member
Posts: 18
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Post by TonyP on Jan 28, 2006 4:09:49 GMT -5
It might seem pointless, but it's fun. Yes - I suppose i could agree with that!
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