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Bibliographies (9)
Courses (9)
Dictionaries (17)
Grammars (6)
Web Pages
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A Brief History of Old English http://acunix.wheatonma.edu/mdrout/GrammarBook2005/HistoryOfOE.html
Explains how political and cultural events changed the Anglo-Saxon language into the English spoken today. By Michael Drout.
About Old English http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/eduweb/engl401/faq.htm
Answers the questions: What is old English, Why learn Old English, and Why is Old English so different from modern English. By Murray McGillivray
An Introduction to Anglo-Saxon Manuscripts http://www.fathom.com/course/10701049/index.html
An illustrated online seminar by Michelle Brown. Sessions include: Anglo-Saxon England and the Book, Reading and Writing the Manuscripts, Spiritual and Secular Worlds, Materials and Techniques, and Illustration and Ornament.
ASPR Search Engine http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~bede/search.html
This online tool finds all occurrences of a specified word or phrase in the Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records (ASPR), which contain the complete body of Old English poetry.
Case in Old English http://faculty.washington.edu/stevickr/graphotactics/case_OE.html
Robert Stevick's study of case and other grammatical elements of Old English.
Changes in the English Language: a Comparison of Old, Middle, and Modern English http://www.bible-researcher.com/engchange.html
For each verse of Luke 2:1-19, displays an Old English, Middle English, and Modern English version of the verse.
Changes in the Language to the Days of Chaucer http://www.bartleby.com/211/1901.html
Studies the development of Old English and Middle English. Covers grammar, pronunciation, spelling, vocabulary, and dialects.
Conceptual Semantics and Grammatical Relations in Old English http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Conceptual+semantics+and+grammatical+relations+in+Old+English....-a095680209
A study of Old English from the viewpoint of historical linguistics. Covers word order, theta roles, and word formation. By Ruta Nagucka.
Englisc Composition Listserv http://www.rochester.edu/englisc/
An electronic discussion group dedicated to writing and communicating in Old English. Includes event announcements and links.
Estimating Probabilities and Alliteration Frequencies in Old English Verse http://www.oenewsletter.org/OEN/archive.php/bredehoft34_1/essays/1/
Studies various kinds of alliteration rates for Old English poetry and shows how non-primary alliteration sometimes plays a functional and artistic role in Old English verse. By Thomas A. Bredehoft.
History of the English Language Lectures http://pages.towson.edu/duncan/helhome.html
Includes several videos, with narration, on Old English language topics. By Edwin Duncan.
Junicode Font Page http://junicode.sourceforge.net/
Junicode is a font for medievalists created by Peter Baker. If a computer is unable to display certain characters that can appear in online Old English texts, the Junicode font supplies the needed characters. Site describes the font and includes a link to a page from which the font can be downloaded.
Medieval Writing: Literate English http://medievalwriting.50megs.com/whyread/english.htm
Study of the history of written English, with emphasis on Anglo-Saxon manuscripts and the culture that produced them. Includes numerous illustrations and photos.
Meter in Old English Poetry http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/pometer.html
Describes the use of alliteration in Old English poems and the rhythmic patterns employed in the individual lines of these poems. By Peter Baker.
Old English Alphabet http://www.omniglot.com/writing/oldenglish.htm
Shows the form and pronunciation of each letter in the Old English alphabet. Includes a sample text from a manuscript, a transcription of this text, and a modern English translation. Also shows the form, name, and equivalent English letter for each rune in the Runic alphabet
Old English Compared to Modern English http://www.m-w.com/help/faq/history.htm
Merriam-Webster Online article uses a passage from Aelfric's Homily on St. Gregory to show the similarities and differences between Old English and Modern English. Also compares Middle English to Modern English and describes the Germanic roots of Old English.
Old English Graphotactics http://faculty.washington.edu/stevickr/graphotactics/index.html
A site dedicated to editions of Old English texts that include the graphotactics of original manuscripts and to studies of these texts. Graphotactics concerns the incidence and measure of spacings between strings of written symbols of a text. In such texts both the graphic symbols and the spacings carry linguistic information. Text and syntactical study of Beowulf and Alexander's Letter to Aristotle.
Old English Language http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English
Introduction to Old English from the Wikipedia online encyclopedia. Covers Germanic origins; Latin, Norse, and Celtic influence; dialects, phonology, and orthography; and grammar.
Old English Links http://www.oe.eclipse.co.uk/nom/linksoe.htm
Includes links to books and articles on Old English language topics.
Old English Manuscripts Database http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/mss/oe/oldeng.html
Gives descriptive information for each of the approximately 200 Old English manuscripts containing a significant amount of Anglo-Saxon. Includes a brief introduction to Old English manuscripts.
Old English Syntax: Some Literary Illustrations http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~cpercy/courses/OESyntaxPoeticOverhead.htm
Shows how selected literary texts exemplify characteristic features of Old English syntax.
Old English Verb Conjugator http://www.verbix.com/languages/oldenglish.shtml
Online tool that accepts the infinitive form of an Old English verb as input and displays the complete conjugation of that verb as output. Also summarizes Old English verb groups and classes.
Poetic Style in Old English http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/postyle.html
Explains the stylistic characteristics of Old English poems, including a vocabulary found only in poems, the use of variation in poetic sentences, and the formulaic nature of poetic phrases and themes. By Peter Baker.
Reading Old English Manuscripts http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/mss.html
Provides essential information for reading Old English manuscripts as opposed to the transcriptions used in edited texts. Covers the Old English alphabet, manuscript abbreviations, punctuation, capitalization, word and line divisions, and errors and corrections. By Peter Baker.
Runes and Manuscripts http://www.bartleby.com/211/0201.html
Studies the development of the alphabet and writing in Anglo-Saxon England. Topics include: the national Germanic alphabet (runes), the use of runes in literature, the influence of the Roman and Irish alphabets on the English hand, the tools of book-making, and the role of scribes and scriptoria.
The Anglo-Saxons and Their Language http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/genintro.html
Explains who the Anglo-Saxons were, where their language came from, and what their language was like. Also describes the relationship of Old English to other Germanic languages and to modern English. By Peter Baker.
The Grammar of Old English Poetry http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/pogrammar.html
Describes the features of grammar in Old English poetry that distinguish it from the grammar of prose. Covers inflections, syntax, and word order. By Peter Baker.
The Language of the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings http://www.regia.org/languag.htm
Describes the survival of Old English and Old Norse words in modern English. Includes illustrations.
The MANCASS C11 Database http://www.arts.manchester.ac.uk/mancass/C11database/
A tool for studying writing and spelling in eleventh century manuscripts. Helps scholars to determine whether a standard form of written English existed in the eleventh century.
The Parable of the Prodigal Son in Different Stages of English http://pages.towson.edu/duncan/LukeXVOE.htm
Gives Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English, and Modern English versions of Luke 15:11-32 and allows side-by-side comparisons of different versions. Includes audio of verses 11-21 in each version.
The Prosody of Old and Middle English http://www.bartleby.com/211/1801.html
Explains the poetic principles and techniques that underlie all Old English poetry. Also covers the transition from Old English to Middle English poetic forms, foreign influences on Middle English poetry, and the alliterative revival of the 14th century.
The Runic Alphabet http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/library/oe/texts/runes.html
Shows the entire set of Anglo-Saxon runic symbols. Includes the name of each symbol and the equivalent English letter for that symbol.
The Sounds of Old English http://faculty.washington.edu/stevickr/graphotactics/sounds.html
Robert D. Stevick's account of the Old English sound system. Includes exercises.
Tricks for Translating Old English http://acunix.wheatonma.edu/mdrout/GrammarBook2005/Tricks.html
Gives tips for making the translation of Old English easier. These tricks involve an understanding of certain grammatical constructions that are very common in Old English: modal plus infinitive, partitive genitive, locative dative, and the "ge" prefix of verbs. By Michael Drout.
Verb Movement in Old and Middle English: Dialect Variation and Language Contact http://www.ling.upenn.edu/~kroch/omev2-html/omev2-html.html
Studies the position of the verb in Old English word order and shows the influence of this “V2” (verb-second) syntax on the word order of Middle English dialects.

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