from Brittonic *tatV-, meaning "dad". Equally possibly an independent innovation, although well-attested in Celtic and other Indo-European languages,[6] including German[7]
dam
possibly from Brittonic *damā-, meaning "female sheep or deer"; alternatively from French dame, "lady, woman".[8]
doe
possibly from a Brittonic root *da-,[9] perhaps related to *damā- above.
dunnock
from Brittonic *dunn-āco-s, *dunn-occo-s, meaning "little brown one".
flannel
possibly from Brittonic *u̯lan-ello-s, meaning "little woollen thing". Possibly from Gaulish via French (flaine + diminutive suffix), or loaned from Welsh (gwlanen).[10]
gob
possibly from Brittonic gobbo-s, meaning "mouth, lump, mouthful". Equally possibly from Gaelic, or Gaulish via French.[11]
nook
So where does the word ”England” come from?
The Germanic tribe the Angles, who came from "Englaland" in mainland Europé, in Germany and their language was called "Englisc" Frisian (spoken today only in coastal and island areas of the Netherlands) remains the closest living relative to English.
The Vikings are Coming! 500 A.D.
Danish rule for over 100 years
The Angles, Saxons, Jutes and Frisians were all Germanic-speaking peoples whose original territories stretched from Holland to the Danish peninsula, What we now know as Old English is a mixture of these tongues with traces of Latin, brought by the previous Roman rulers of Britain.