User blog comment:Hjetland/some ''ground rules''/@comment-34246601-20181015004043/@comment-34246601-20181015015842

1. "Indo-European" is a much wider thought than English, therefore if you, let's say, put more Greek loanwords into English, then you may well be making it more Indo-European, but not more Germanish. In other words, "A square is always a rectangle but a rectangle is not always a square."

2. It is still a wedding. What you are saying now, is only another way of looking at the same thing. It still fits the meaning of a "wedding".

3. How was that a dig at you in any way? One byspel of doing that would be something like telling someone that he "is a shithead". All I said was that you made that up, as you did, seeing that it was not true. No, I am not going away.