Let us commence.
god
Old English transitioned into Middle English over a long period of time; there's no single date you can point to and say, "That's the last person to speak Old English."
lets want to get high in french is laisse vouloir obtenir haut
Houses were old, not built secure, no heat, no electricity, no garages to put cars in, lets just say not as great as the houses we have now in 2009.
Ich hasse filthy spania
lets be together or we will be together
No. In English we say "How old are you?"
one is mimic you could use, lets say... mimicked mimickers
Ain't is considered bad English because lets say that you say "ain't you coming over today there are many more words you can use instead
"boucher"
god
In Old English, the word "the" was typically written as "se" or "þe" and pronounced as "theh".
You would say "How old are you?"
Old in English is the same as "gammal" in Swedish.
"Letz" is a way to pronounce the English word "lets." The above pronunciation represents a speech pattern from the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States of America. The verb in question will have as synonyms "allows" or "permits" and "leases" or "rents" depending upon English contexts.
sandwich
In latin i am is sum