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.
Yes. That's kind of a simple question. Did you have a particular phrase in mind to be translated?
Scip in Old English is ship in Modern English.
Shakespeare was the father of modern English.
Modern English - band - ended in 1991.
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....
ojniu
Phi Theta Kappa would translate as P T K in the english language. There are many sites out there that can easily translate greek letters to their english counterparts.
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It translates into "July" , though its modern form evolved into many new names.
The modern English sentence of 'she is married to him' can be translated to the Zulu language. Transliterated the sentence is 'Eseshadile kuya hi.'
Shakespeare wrote and spoke modern English. He would have little difficulty understanding people of today, apart from words for things or ideas which did not exist in his time. There is no Shakespearean equivalent for "cell phone".
There aren't any online translators for Old English. You would need to find a person that speaks Old English, perhaps a college professor.
was John Cabot who visited modern-day Canada. go listen to STM Payback