The OLD ENGLISH word for people is YALL !
wait, that's hillbilly, yo.
okay, lets see.. IT'S peeps :D
Yeaaahhhhh, that's right !
the OLD English-ness.. is not TODAY our awesome gangster talk !
what now !
:D
and BTW.. i rock.
In Old English they did not use the letter k but the word "cyle" is the Old English word for "cold".
Ope isn't short for anything in old English - It's a pseudo-word and is found exclusively in modern second-rate verses, where it means "open." The word did not exist back in the time when people spoke Old English.
The word "get" is of Middle English origin, as is the word "got." Both words have Old English and Old Norse roots.
It comes from Middle English from the Old French word boce.
English. It is a name meaning "craftsman, or builder," from the Old English word "wryhta," meaning "worker."
It is an English word, coming to Modern English from Middle English and Old English and to Old English from some prehistoric Germanic tongue. In other words, nobody invented it. People have needed a word which describes the breath of life for as long as there has been language.
The English word "Lent" come from the Middle English word lenten and the Old English word lencten meaning the season of spring.
In Old English they did not use the letter k but the word "cyle" is the Old English word for "cold".
Yes, the word 'thus' has Old English origins.
the old English word for yes is yea
Ope isn't short for anything in old English - It's a pseudo-word and is found exclusively in modern second-rate verses, where it means "open." The word did not exist back in the time when people spoke Old English.
The Kikuyu word for the English word people is watu.
There is no Old English word for "victory", it did not appear until Middle English and was derived from the Old French virtorie and the Latin word victoria.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'old' is Omukofu.
I do not think that is a word in olde English.
The word "get" is of Middle English origin, as is the word "got." Both words have Old English and Old Norse roots.
The Old English word is Wicce or Wicca - a woman having dealings with the devil