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No best answer has yet been selected by mouzy93. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The Saxons did not predate the Angles -- these two together with the Jutes were the main Germanic colonists of what became England.
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The people here before that were the British, speaking a language similar to modern Welsh or Cornish. The "Anglish" (nowadays we usually call them Anglo Saxons) called the native British "Foreigners", which in Anglo Saxon was something like Ouales, or Welsh.
Ironically, the Welsh for Wales is Cymru (pr Cumry), meaning, I think "our people". Cumbria likewise. Welsh for English is Saes, or Saxon, as is the Gaelic Sassenach.
Many British people remained in what became England, leading to many place names with the "wal" element, such as Walford (the ford of the British), Walton (British village), Wallingford etc. A little British survives in English, for example for counting sheep in the Pennines (yan, tan, tethera, methera, pimp), and in a very few words such as Avon (river) and brock (badger).
The British language survived quite a long time in many parts of "England", especially Cornwall, Cumbria, and of course still in Wales.
Of course for the later Normans, British and English were both languages of the common people, and they may not have cared or even known what the differences were.