Anglo is normally linked with Saxon. However the race involved was actually the Angles. Does anyone know why we say Anglo-Saxon rather than Angle-Saxon? Many thanks.
it's a common way of linking two words by ending the first one with an O - Sino-Russian conflict, Indochina.
In America "Anglos" are Europeans in contrast to "Latins" (people from Latin America). So it can be a noun.
I don't know why the Jutes got left out. They got here at the same time as the Angles and Saxons, but nobody remembers them. It should really be Anglo-Juto-Saxon (unless you want to squeeze Frisians in as well).
You can dodge the whole issue by calling them Germanic settlers - this takes into account their linguistic grouping, rather than trying to tell t'other from which in terms of Jutes, Frisians, Saxons, Angles.
I think Anglo-Saxon just rolls off the tongue....there's no deep academic significance behind it.