Yes. That's kind of a simple question. Did you have a particular phrase in mind to be translated?
Yes I do have a middle name Angel Marie Girl60 is the way Amen
Early Modern English started around 1500. For reference, Shakespeare is in Early Modern English; Chaucer is in the London dialect of Middle English.
Olde English, Middle English, Modern English and slang English and lingo of English.
The text is already modern English. Perhaps you mean dumb it down into up-to-date phraseology, like Lissen up doods.
There aren't any online translators for Old English. You would need to find a person that speaks Old English, perhaps a college professor.
English has its origins in ancient Germanic roots. But there is more. There was Olde English, Middle English and Modern English. If you heard someone speak in Olde English you would not understand 90 percent of what they said and they would not understand you. We speak Modern English which has evolved from Olde and Middle English.
The word I is already in modern English.
Elizabethan English is Modern English, just an early form of it.
Huckleberry Finn is in today's English
_no you cant because old English is just the same to modern English....
Old English was the form of the English language spoken from the 5th to the 11th centuries, while Middle English was spoken from the 11th to the late 15th centuries.
The four stages of the English language are Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English, and Modern English. These stages mark the historical development and evolution of the language over time.
In Middle English, many of these endings were lost, and the role a word played in the sentence was determined by word order, like it is today. The word order in Middle English is pretty similar in most cases to Modern English. (There are differences of course, but in general a Middle English sentence is like a Modern English sentence.)
Early Modern English started around 1500. For reference, Shakespeare is in Early Modern English; Chaucer is in the London dialect of Middle English.
Modern English
Katikati is a Swahili word that translates to the word center in English. It can also translate to 'in the middle.'
Depending on the author and his purpose, generally, Old English or Anglo-Saxon (circa 450-1066 CE). Middle English (circa 1066-1450 AD). Early Modern English from about the time of Shakespeare, and Modern English...now!!!
one possible translation would be "the wood wyf"