Celts<span>, broadly speaking, were the people living in the British Isles at the time of the Roman conquest. They spoke languages that were the ancestors of modern Breton, Welsh, Scots Gaelic and Irish.
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Saxons<span> (and their neighbours the Angles and Jutes) started arriving in the British Isles from about the 5th century AD. They came from what is now Denmark, North Germany and Friesland, though they probably lived further East before that. They spoke Germanic languages. These languages (usually lumped together as "Old English" or "Anglo-Saxon") became dominant in most of England and southern Scotland, while Cornwall, Ireland, Wales and northern Scotland remained largely Celtic-speaking.
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hope I answered ur question
Answer:it finally fixed!
1: insulting
2: arrogant
Explanation: these are basically like synonyms but they arnt. Tho it’s a different word it points to the same meaning for example abrasive in this case means he’s trying to inbrace getting you to buy his item to the point that he’s just rude
Sorry for late response I was doing work of my own
The source is credible if they're reliable