Old English is an extinct language which was spoken in England around year 900 (see:English periods). Thisgermanic language is the predecessor of Middle English and modernEnglish.
Some of the Old English characters don't exist in the English alphabet. If you can't input them here - try the following:
| To Get | Enter | Sample Verbs |
|---|---|---|
| æ | aE | laEtan equalslætan |
| þ or ð | tH | tHurfan equalsþurfan |
| ƿ | w | witan equalsƿitan |
Initialþ was writtenth until about 900 in imitation of Latin. This new letter was borrowed from runic alphabet, and writtenþ orð. On these pages onlyþ is used.
w does not occur in Old English manuscripts, but was represented by uu, u. Afterwards it was written with ƿ (wynn), borrowed from runic alphabet.
Old English verbs were grouped in two major groups: weak verbs and strong verbs. A third group contains some verbs not belonging to neither of those groups.
Read the entire article at WikiVerb
English is divided roughly in the following periods:
Old English | 700-1100 |
Transition Old English | 1100-1200 |
Middle English | 1200-1400 |
Transition Middle English | 1400-1500 |
Modern English | 1500- |
Old English may be defined as the period offull endings, Middle English as the period withlevelled endings and Modern English as the period oflost endings.
Due to this fact Old English always presents endings -- in the infinitive, as well. Modern English does not have any personal endings in the verbs, except in the 3rd person singular.