User:Anuragngoel/sandbox

The article i am editing is Romano-British culture and I am adding a new section on language. The references I have used are listed below and I still have to add the references in my description, I mostly used source number two, and I will be adding missing citation to the actual article.

Language

'''The Vindolanda tablets have an historical evidence of a language shared by the Romans and the Britons, Latin. The language spoken at the military sites was different compared to the civilian population. Interactions between the two cultures were seen at the military sites where bilingualism is essential.''' '''The soldiers would write the Latin in the tablets and the amount of Latin in the tablets would depend on the military rankings meaning the lower the rank least Latin written in the tablets due to the soldiers being from overseas vice versa. On one of the tablets was inscribed by a Celtic man name Gavo and the tablet included Celtic writing so this reveals the secrete of foreign languages influencing the Latin at military sites. The history holds an important evidence for the relationship between both the cultures and shared impact on language communication.''' '''The native civilians of the British had adopted the Latin literacy as Celtic names are discovered in the tablets and a name of a civilian can reveal their origin. It's known that Celtic civilians that had transferred to Roman naming, had adopted new Latin names. Based on the names it was drawn that there were majority of Roman names compare to Celtic names in Roman and the Celtic names were written on curse tablets as they are not Latin names. The curse tablets written by Celtic individuals included few text of Latin terms as the text indicates the curse tablets illustrating the spoken Latin of Romano-British Civilians, a mixture of two languages.'''

Sources for the Romano-British culture:


 * 1) https://www.britannica.com/place/Roman-Britain/Life-in-Roman-Britain
 * 2) https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5378&context=etd
 * 3) http://factsanddetails.com/world/cat56/sub399/entry-6325.html
 * 4) https://www.ancient.eu/Roman_Britain/
 * 5) https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Roman_Britain