Sums you up pretty well. Really got in your head, haven’tYou must log in or register to see images
I?
Sums you up pretty well. Really got in your head, haven’tYou must log in or register to see images
Stop projecting, boring fool. I don't think Ben and I have ever interacted.Ah, diddums. Don’t like people telling it like it is about your mate?
Think some people need a forum ban.
Go on then
List every single uk coastal town/city and rank them
Every single one
Yeah, but they'll just come back under a different profile, like Castro did.
I can do no more than apologise GFAWJust been catching up on here.
WTAF.
Embarrassing .... from all of you.
Hull has a few etymological theories.Why is the city called hull though
Should be called kingston city afc surely
If taking every other citys naming standards
Thanks, I was literally having this conversation the other day with someone about how it's odd hull has ended up with the name of the river as the name of the city, whereas Newcastle isn't called Tyne, for instance.Hull has a few etymological theories.
1. It’s from Old Norse hyl- < Proto-Germanic *hulh- which means a ‘pool in a stream/river’. This would be cognate to modern Danish and Norwegian høl.
2. It’s from Old English hula (plural of hulu) < Proto-Germanic *hul- which means ‘covering’.
3. It’s from Proto-Brythonic *hʉl < Proto-Celtic *soulos (with regular sound change of /s/ > /h/ in Brythonic), probably from a verbal root ‘to press’.
The original name was therefore either *Hylvík (settlement by a pool in the river) in Old Norse, *Hulawíh in Old Northumbrian English (settlement of coverings/huts) or some old Celtic river name with the Germanic settlement suffix -vík/wíh/wíc. The Old Norse or Old Northumbrian forms vík/wíh are the origin of -wick and Wyke, identical to -wich in southern English dialects.
Stop projecting, boring fool. I don't think Ben and I have ever interacted.
Remember that time you had an argument about what time things close in Spain, with someone that was there at the time? you brought out all the google searches you could manage as you couldn't handle being wrong.
Or that recent postcode gaff.
You are a massive drain on this place and you continue to prove my point that you never discuss footy, just the same boring ****e.
The fact that you take notice of and care so much about likes, shows how pathetic you are. Funny that you still can't just accept or admit that you were wrong about something.You like every post of his which has a pop at other people.
Funny, people O know who have been to the same place in Spain at that time of year didn’t complain of everywhere being shut at 9pm at that time of year. But there you go…
Wyke = wich. Twinned with a famous city which has 2 cathedrals and was a major English city when was a hamlet.Hull has a few etymological theories.
1. It’s from Old Norse hyl- < Proto-Germanic *hulh- which means a ‘pool in a stream/river’. This would be cognate to modern Danish and Norwegian høl.
2. It’s from Old English hula (plural of hulu) < Proto-Germanic *hul- which means ‘covering’.
3. It’s from Proto-Brythonic *hʉl < Proto-Celtic *soulos (with regular sound change of /s/ > /h/ in Brythonic), probably from a verbal root ‘to press’.
The original name was therefore either *Hylvík (settlement by a pool in the river) in Old Norse, *Hulawíh in Old Northumbrian English (settlement of coverings/huts) or some old Celtic river name with the Germanic settlement suffix -vík/wíh/wíc. The Old Norse or Old Northumbrian forms vík/wíh are the origin of -wick and Wyke, identical to -wich in southern English dialects.
The fact that mentioning what you do upsets you so much shows how pathetic you are. There are plenty on here who cannot admit they were wrong.The fact that you take notice of and care so much about likes, shows how pathetic you are. Funny that you still can't just accept or admit that you were wrong about something.
Should've stuck to 'Hulu' and called the team the 'Hoops'....Wyke = wich. Twinned with a famous city which has 2 cathedrals and was a major English city when was a hamlet.
You have to wonder if the city would have a better image if its full title had been used instead of ‘Ull. And what names the sporting teams would have adopted.
It’s debated whether the city is named after the river (the Celtic hydronym hypothesis) or the river is named after an Anglo-Saxon or Norse settlement.Thanks, I was literally having this conversation the other day with someone about how it's odd hull has ended up with the name of the river as the name of the city, whereas Newcastle isn't called Tyne, for instance.
Green and white hoops?Should've stuck to 'Hulu' and called the team the 'Hoops'....

It matters not...I'm colour blind.Green and white hoops?
Hullwick would probably be its proper full name today were it not for the royal charter.Wyke = wich. Twinned with a famous city which has 2 cathedrals and was a major English city when was a hamlet.
You have to wonder if the city would have a better image if its full title had been used instead of ‘Ull. And what names the sporting teams would have adopted.
Genuine question, so what would you be seeing?It matters not...I'm colour blind.