The Old English word "monath" means "month." It is the word from which the modern English term "month" is derived.
The Old English word for "no" is "nān."
Being concerned. The word is not old English and is actually solicitous.
development means badhotry.
The term is "spring," which is derived from the Old English word "springan." It means to jump or leap.
The word "said" has its origins in Old English and has been used in the English language for over a thousand years. It is derived from the Old English word "sægde," which means to speak or utter words.
Monath is an old English word meaning "month". That doesn't seem very "occult" to me.
From the Old English 'monath' and of German from the word 'moant' and the Dutch word 'maant'
Monath means 'month', most specifically, the month following a specific event or festival.
The Old English word for "no" is "nān."
the old English word for yes is yea
I do not think that is a word in olde English.
Being concerned. The word is not old English and is actually solicitous.
The word husband is of Old and Middle English origin. The word husband means householder in Old and Middle English.
development means badhotry.
The English word world comes from the Old English woruld. This comes from the Old German weralt, which means age of man.
Ostern = Easter. The modern English term comes from the Old English word Eastre, which was in use prior to 899. The Eostur-monath, a month of the Germanic calendar, may have been named for the pagan goddess Eostre in Anglo-Saxon paganism, but documentation of this goddess is almost non-existant.
Thither is not an Old English word. It merely means "there" in Modern English as in hither and thither, "here and there".