Early Old English (650-850)
- aeppel
- earm
-
- fugl, fugul
- sueart, blaec
- blod
- boc
- hlaf
- brycg
- broðar, broðor
- bycgan
- catte
- cese
- cirice
-
- cuu
- dohtar
- daeg, dæg
- deud, dead
- deop
- hund
- duru
- drincen
- eare
- eten
-
-
- æge
- faedaer, faeder
- findan
- fyr
- fisc
- fif
- blostme
- foot, fot
- uuald, wald
- fiower, feower
-
- ful
-
- giaban
- gold
- good, god
- groene, grene
- hand
-
- he
- heafud
-
- heorte
- hors
- hus
- hund
- ic
- is
- in
- isern, iren
-
- hit
-
- cyning, kyning
- cnio, cneow
- meri
- micel
-
-
- milc
-
- fiah, feoh
- monað
- mona
- moder
- beorg
- muus, mus
- mud, muð
- nama
- niowe
- naect, naeht, næht
- nigen
- ald, eald
- an, on
- an
- open
- geldan
-
- . . . . .
- . . . . .
- quoen, cuoen, cwoen, cwæn
- regen, regn
- raedan
- reod, read
- aea, æa, ea
-
- salt, sealt
-
- sae, sæ
- sibun, sifun
- hio, heo
- scep
- scip
- seolfur
- singan
- swæstar
- sitten
- sex
- slepan
- lytel
- snaw
-
- sunu
- sprecan
- steorra
- staan, stan
- stræt
- sumur
- sunne
- swoete
- nioman
- ten
- hio
- ðicce
- ðynne
- ðusend
- thriu, ðrio, ðreo
- þuner
- tid
- tunge
- toð
- burg
- tua, twa
-
- dal, dael
- ðrop, tuun, tun
- uig, wig
- uuaeter, waeter
- we; wit plural; dual
-
-
- huuit, huit, hwit
- uuind, wind
- uuin, win
- uuinter, winter
- uulf, wulf
- writan
- . . . . .
- ger, gear
- gelu, gelo
- thu, ðu; ge singular; plural
- iung, gung
- nowiht
Early Old English was spoken in:
Lindocolina (Lincoln)
Uintancaestir (Winchester)
Tilaburg (Tilbury)
Heorutford (Hertford)
Liccidfeld (Lichfield)
Deccanhaam (Dagenham)
Breguntford (Brentford)
Uuestburg (Westbury)
Escancastre (Exeter)
Hastingas (Hastings)
Loidis (Leeds)
To learn more