The Anglish Moot
The Anglish Moot
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File:Map of USA with state and territory names 2.png

A map of the Tied Folklands showing its 50 riches, stoop bylaw and five settled landholds. Alaska, Hawaii, and the landholds are shown at other scales, and the Aleutish Ilands and the unsettled northwestern Hawaiish Ilands are left out from this landsheet.

The Tied Folklands of Americksland is a banded mootland[1] made up of 50 riches, a stoop bylaw (Washington, D.C., the headtown of the Tied Folklands), five main landholds, and many lesser outlying ilands.[2][3] Both the riches and the Tied Folklands as a whole are each main rulings.[4] The Tenth Amendment to the Tied Folklands Lawbook lets riches work out all rulings of stewership not given to the banded mootgow. Each rich has its own lawbook and stewership, and all riches and their dwellers are stood for in the banded Moot, a two-housed lawmoot made up of the Thinghouse and the Folkhouse. Each rich is stood for by two thingsmen, while folkstaves are dealt among the riches in evenness to the most newly mootman-talled mootman tally.[5] Forbys, each rich is allowed to choose a rime of lawmakers to cast in the Cheeser Wittenmoot, the body that chooses the leader of the Tied Folklands, even to the full rime of folkstaves and thingsmen in Moot from that rich.[6] The banded stoop does not have thingsmen in the Thinghouse, but has an unchoosing thingmannaship in the Folkhouse, and it is also allowed to choose lawmakers in the Cheeser Wittenmoot. Moot can oncome more riches, but it cannot make a new rich from land of an already standing rich or meld two or more riches into one without the lave of all riches drawn in, and each new rich is oncomed on an even footing with the already standing riches.[7]

The Tied Folklands has sway over fourteen landholds. Five of them (Americkish Samoa, Guam, the Northern Mariana Ilands, Puerto Rico, and the O.R. Maiden Ilands) have a lasting, unwyelike folkrime, while nine of them (the Lesser Outlying Ilands of the Tied Folklands) do not. With the leaving out of Navassa Iland, Puerto Rico, and the O.R. Maiden Ilands, which are set in the Caribbean, all landholds are set in the Great Southern Sea. One landhold, Palmyra Atoll, is thought to be taken in, meaning the full body of the Lawbook has been put to it; the other landholds are untaken, meaning the Lawbook does not fully put to them. Ten landholds (the Lesser Outlying Ilands and Americkish Samoa) are thought to be unsteered, meaning they have not had a kindful law happenstilled by Moot; the four other landholds are steered, meaning a natural law has been happenstilled by Moot. The five lived in landholds each have fettered selfwielding forby having landstings and landwielders, but dwellers cannot cast in banded kirs, though all are stood for by un-choosing thingmannaships in the Folkhouse.

The greatest rich by folkrime is California, with a folkrime of 39,538,223 folk, while the least is Wyoming, with a folkrime of 576,851 folk; the banded stoop has a greater folkrime (689,545) than both Wyoming and Vermont. The greatest rich by room is Alaska, spanning 665,384 fouredged miles (1,723,337 fouredged kilometers), while the least is Rhode Iland, spanning 1,545 fouredged miles (4,001 fouredged kilometers). The newest riches oncomed, Alaska and Hawaii, were oncomed in 1959. The greatest landhold by folkrime is Puerto Rico, with a folkrime of 3,285,874 folk (greater than 21 riches), while the least is the Northern Mariana Ilands, with a folkrime of 47,329 folk. Puerto Rico is the greatest landhold by room, spanning 5,325 fouredged miles (13,791 fouredged kilometers); the least landhold, Kingman Rif, spans only 0.005 fouredged miles (0.01 fouredged kilometers).

Riches[]

  1. Longham (Alabama) - Old English lang (long) + hām (home)
  2. Greatland/Frostland (Alaska) - Old English frost (frost) + land
  3. Droughtland (Arizona) - Old English drūg (dry) + land
  4. Bowland (Arkansas) - Old English boga (bow) + land
  5. Redpeak (Colorado) - Old English rēad (red) + peac (peak)
  6. Bindland (Connecticut) - Old English bindan (to bind) + land
  7. Alderwood (Delaware) - Old English alor (alder) + wudu (wood)
  8. Earthrich (Georgia) - Old English eorðe (earth) + rīce (realm)
  9. God's Iland (Hawaii) - original hawaiian word means "place of the God"
  10. Stonyhome (Idaho) - Old English stān (stone) + hām (home)
  11. Innland (Indiana) - Old English "inn" (inside) + land
  12. Weenland (Kansas) - Old English wēn (hope) + land
  13. Boldrich (Kentucky) - Old English bold (building) + rīce (realm)
  14. Lowerland (Louisiana) - lower + land
  15. Stoneridge (Maine) - Old English stān (stone) + hrycg (ridge)
  16. Marriland (Maryland) - Old English Maria (Mary) + land
  17. Folkseat (Massachusetts) - Old English folc (people) + sǣte (house)
  18. Greatwater (Michigan) - Old English grēat (great) + wæter (water)
  19. Littlewater (Minnesota) - Old English "lȳtel" (little) + "wæter" (water)
  20. Streamland (Mississippi) - Old English strēam (stream) + land
  21. Hilland (Montana) - Old English hyll (hill) + land
  22. Cornland (Nebraska) - Old English corn + land
  23. New Hopefolk (New Hampshire) - Old English "níwe" (new) + "hopa" (hope) + "folc" (people)
  24. New Monsnave (New Mexico) - Old English "níwe" (new) + ???
  25. New Everwich (New York) - Old English "níwe" (new) + "Eoforwíc" (York)
  26. North Freeholder (North Carolina) - Old English "norð" (north) + "dēor" (deer) + "land" (land)
  27. North Friendland (North Dakota) - Old English "norð" (north) + "dakota" (Dakota) + "land" (land)
  28. Evenhome (Oklahoma) - Old English "ēfen" (even) + "hām" (home)
  29. Talland (Oregon) - Old English tall + land
  30. Pennswoods (Pennsylvania) - Old English "Penn" (Penn) + "wudu" (wood)
  31. Rod Iland (Rhode Island) - Old English rōd (rod) + "īgland" (island)
  32. South Freeholder (South Carolina) - Old English "sūð" (south) + ???
  33. South Friendland (South Dakota) - Old English "sūð" (south) + "dakota" (Dakota) + "land" (land)
  34. Tennrich (Tennessee) - Old English "tyn" (ten) + "rīce" (realm)
  35. Friendland (Texas) - native american Cabbo word means friend
  36. Hillfolkland (Utah) - originates from the Native American "Ute" tribe which means people of the mountains.
  37. Greenhill (Vermont) - Old English "grēne" (green) + hyll
  38. Maidenland (Virginia) - The word maiden is similar to virgin.
  39. West Maidenland (West Virginia) - The word maiden is similar to virgin.
  40. Redsandstone/Wisehome (Wisconsin) - Old English "wīs" (wise) + "hām" (home)

Tiedlands[]

Folkful Tiedlands[]

  1. Folkchicken Iland (American Samoa)- Sa meaning “tribe, people of,” and Moa meaning “chicken”
  2. Rawshaft Iland (Guam)- from Chamorro Guåhan, meaning "a place that has" or "a place of resources".
  3. Northern Wyedaughter Ilands (Northern Mariana Islands)- Mariana comes from Marius (war) + -ana (daughter)
  4. Harbor-Rich/Harbor-Richland (Puerto Rico)- puerto meaning port, rico being a cognate of rich
  5. O.R. Maiden Ilands/Oned Riches Maiden Ilands- the word maiden is similar to virgin.


International tidyman
This leaf is a runner for unmarking .
If you do not hold with this leaf's unmarking, bring forth your grounds here at Runners for Unmarking or the talk-leaf of what is to be unmarked, or better the leaf and fordo this mark.
Overseers: umbethink to look at what stems here and the leaf's timeline before unmarking.
  1. Template:Work
  2. Template:Web
  3. Template:Web
  4. Radan, 2007, p. 12
  5. Template:Web
  6. Template:Web
  7. Template:Web
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