zorokash t1_j0smzeh wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Ancient Grammatical Puzzle That Has Baffled Scientists for 2,500 Years Solved by Cambridge University Student by Superb_Boss289
I literally explained how people are speaking it as a secondary language for various functions such as speech, poetry, prose, and theatre. People are speaking and writing it. There are schools teaching it in the hundreds. You are using the word "speaking" but not giving a satisfactory definition of it.
[deleted] t1_j0sperd wrote
So not no one?
zorokash t1_j0sq3g3 wrote
Yes, not Noone. There are speakers who speak it regularly, in the several thousands. Just not as mother tongue.
[deleted] t1_j0t9l1e wrote
Okay. You kept on saying no one speaks the dying languages. So you can see that language isn't exactly precise and even though you think the definition of dead language isn't obvious, that doesn't mean it's wrong.
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