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FYROMians are mostly Slavicized ancient Macedonians, ranging from 1/3 to 1/4 Slavic and 2/3 to 3/4 Paleo-Balkan; hence very close to Albanians and North Greeks ("real Macedonians")
Although culturally, they feel closer to Serbs (thanks to Tito's policy of developing Macedonian identity and nurturing the opposition against Bulgarian """Tatars""")
We do not drink Coca-Cola three hours before a match
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According to one theory Aromanians are descendants of Latin speaking people from Syrmia which arrived to Macedonia with Kuber in 7th century https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuber
If this hipothesis would be true (poven by archeogenetic or something for example) that doesn't mean Syrmia today should belong to Aromanians. The live in Epirus, Macedonia and Thessaly for sure over 1000 years and they are native in that regions. Serbs are more native in the Balkans than anywhere where early or proto Serbs lived in northern Slavic soild.
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Because 2000 years ago our language was latin with some non latin words and weird grammar, the illyrian language died and only some words survived,when the roman empire started collapsing the ancestors of albanians took refuge to higher altitudes so the language became weirder and weirder and further from latin.
If you read gjon buzuku meshari is even more latin then today albanian
Take for example the oldest albanian phrase the formula of baptism and compare it with latin
Unte paghesont premenit Atit et birit et spertit senit
Ego te baptizo in nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti.
Yes but using slavic loan words in albanian we know for a fact that the ghegh-tosk split happened before the slavs came, as slavic loanwords are the same in both ghegh and tosk and didn't went through dialectical sound shift like latin and greek words
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Sirmium was one of the largest and most important cities in Roman empire. Who knows, maybe that theory is true.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirmium
"Ten Roman emperors were born in this city or in its surroundings: Herennius Etruscus (251), Hostilian (251), Decius (249–251), Claudius II (268-270), Quintillus (270), Aurelian (270–275), Probus (276–282), Maximian (285–310), Constantius II (337–361), and Gratian (367–383)."
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No we spoke latin the albanian language evolved only as product of isolation
How did we get latin words for baths palatium imperator hospital and other urban related things if we lived in 2000 m?
Greek word for dinner milestone?
How did shepherds with no "roads" got an ancient greek word for milestone?
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