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No. Middle English is two words.
Chaucer wrote in Middle English (although of course he didn't think of it that way; he would have said he was writing in Englisshe). Chaucer wrote in what is now called Middle English. Middle English has many words and spellings that are still the same in English today, though it was pronounced very differently, and a modern English reader can make some sense of it. Old English was used about 200 years earlier and is a mixture of early German and Scandinavian. It used letters which are not in the modern alphabet and has almost nothing in common with modern English in spelling or meaning.
Middle English is the general term used by etymologists to cover the range of English commonly written and spoken from about 1100 to about 1500. Shakespeare was born in 1564. Doubtless he used many Middle English words and spellings, as well as 'Middle English' grammar. However, his time period was at the beginning of what is currently called the Modern English period, from the mid 16th century to date.
"Olde" is an archaic spelling of "old" that was commonly used in Middle English. "Shoppe" is an archaic spelling of "shop" that was influenced by Middle Dutch and Middle Low German. Both words were commonly used in medieval England and have since evolved in modern English.
The Normans added words to the English language during their occupation.
And To On We Us Of
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.
None. Shakespeare did not speak Old English. He spoke and wrote in Modern English, and although some Modern English words come from Old English roots, he probably would not recognize them in that form.
A common example of a phonemic split is the Great Vowel Shift in English, which occurred during the Middle English period. This shift changed the pronunciation of long vowels in English words, resulting in a split between the older pronunciation and the modern pronunciation of words like "name" or "time".
Norman invaders in the 11th century. This led to the development of Middle English, which combined elements of both languages and eventually evolved into Modern English.
In Middle English you had a choice of these words meaning "flower":blomblosmeflourVowels had different values than in modern English, so these words would be pronounced something like blohm, blossmeh and floo-r. The plural of flour is floures (flowers), pronounced floo-rehs.
The Scandinavian invasion of Britain between the 8th and 11th centuries led to the incorporation of many Old Norse words into Old English, which eventually influenced the development of the English language. These loanwords enriched the vocabulary of English and contributed to its evolution into Middle and Modern English.