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    Old English: Definition from Answers.com
  • Old English n. The English language from the middle of the 5th to the beginning ... For more information on Old English, visit Britannica.com. ...
  • http://www.answers.com/topic/old-english-language
Questions/Answers
Old english!?
i need help turning english we use now to the old shakespearen english....please help beacuse i have to write my own play for school and i wanted to use the old english! thanks! but i need a website!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Shakespeare's English was neither Old nor Middle English. Both of those are very different from our present form of English and predate Shakespeare considerably. Shakespeare used the same modern English we do, he just phrased it in the manner of Elizabethan and Jacobean times. I'm not familiar with any website that will make what you write sound like what Shakespeare wrote, but the best way to begin would be to read a few of his plays and poems and familiarize yourself with his style and tone. Then, try to write your lines in free verse as he did, meaning they are in the iambic meter which has one unaccented syllable followed by one accented syllable. This is very clear in his most famous sonnet number 18, "shall I comPARE thee TO a SUMmer's DAY." Good luck!
How many puppies can an OldEnglish Sheepdog have and howmany times can they havepuppies?
I have an Old English Sheepdog. They also are known as bobtails. Please answer. I really need to know even though she can't have puppies. At least give me an estimate on just an average dog.
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about 6-8 pups. and they can have them two times a year.. do the math and thats a lot of puppies!! and not enough homes for them all...
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How do you think English wouldbe today, if Old English wasnever changed by the French?
When changed it added new words such as Old French = stomach, Old English = gut, Old French = mucus, Old English = snot. Do you think another language would have influenced or it would have stayed the same as it was? Also adding of other language such as Latin and Greek.
English of course has up to 40% of its vocabulary from French and also from Latin. It is a Germanic language though and if you have a look at Old English, you can see just how much English has changed over the last millenium. Of course you have Greek and not to mention the fact English is an extremely flexible language, as in it can absorb words from other languages. Take for example the word 'oversee'. It could also be 'overlook' in native English. However, via French there is another word namely 'supervise' and not to mention 'survey'. These ultimately derive from Latin. Over, super and sur mean above respectively and see, look, vise, "vey" relate to sight or vision. Also note how English has given a new meaning for survey, though it still can mean oversee. My guess that if the Normans hadn't invaded, English wouldn't be the internationally reknowned language as it is known now. It'd be like a German-Scandinavian mix. In the following sentence alone, there are words from many language sources. - the article 'the' has Germanic origins - typhoon comes from Cantonese 'dai foong' (big wind) - grand, caused, people, resulted come from French and I'm sure ill is scandinavian. Well you get my point. "The grand typhoon caused many people to fall ill due to the floods which resulted."
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