Who's the father of your language /his/?
>>35305
Agricola
>>35305
Cervantes
the bard motherfuckers
>>35305
>>35305
Manzoni.
If your language was created by one dude, it's pretty much a non-language.
>>35305
Of the modern variant.
>>35305
Jayden Smith
Pic related, the author of the first book in the Slovene language. He created the written language from several Slovene dialects and was the first to do so.
this guy right here.
>>35520
Chaucer is the English equivalent to Dante, anon.
>>35520
r u fukin sure m8
>>35628
>literally half a minute before you
Friend...
>>35652
I was just thinking that.
Also I'd say Bohorič was way more influential, but I like Trubar because we share a name and his sermons were great.
>>35696
Considering he was the first to form some sort of joint Slovene literary language and he wrote the first book, he has no contenders.
>>35774
Well yeah, but when the grammar was formed he delegated it to Bohorič. But he still is the one for Slovenian literary language. Without him we probably wouldn't have either Krelj or Bohorič.
>>35568
Manzoni was probably the closest we'll ever get to see a theist acting like an atheist.
Get that shit out of here.
>>35305
The biggest impact probably had Martin Luther.
His bible translation was the most widely-read book among the literate populace for decades.
Regarding aesthetics I'd go with Goethe
this madman
>>35950
Germans are shit.
>>35972
t. buttmad frogeater
Chaucer
>>36049
I wish for no more sixes in my diet for it could possibly get influenced by foreign powers that do not agree with my predilection towards the intimate bonding of my lesser know extremities. If you like to forward your issues to a more subservient donor, I would gladly accommodate your staying in the hotel as long as you abstain from sowing discord among the flocks of birds who have nested here.
Farewell.