Old English
English
Proper noun
- (linguistics, historical) The ancestor language of Modern English, also called Anglo-Saxon, spoken in most of Britain from about 400 AD to 1100.
- (nonstandard, colloquial, proscribed) Archaic English (Early Modern English) or Middle English speech or writing, or an imitation of this: "old" English.
- 2008, Stephen J. Harris, Bryon Lee Grigsby, Misconceptions About the Middle Ages, page 177:
- Those who claim that they've been reading Shakespeare in Old English betray their ignorance: they haven't.
- 2008, Stephen J. Harris, Bryon Lee Grigsby, Misconceptions About the Middle Ages, page 177:
- (typography, historical) The form of black letter used by 16th-century English printers.
Synonyms
Related terms
Translations
ancestor language of modern English
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See also
- Wiktionary's coverage of Old English terms
- Germanic
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