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  2. Old English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English

    Old English is one of the West Germanic languages, and its closest relatives are Old Frisian and Old Saxon. Like other old Germanic languages, it is very different from Modern English and Modern Scots, and largely incomprehensible for Modern English or Modern Scots speakers without study. [ 3 ]

  3. Anglo-Frisian languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Frisian_languages

    While this has been cited as a reason for a few traits exclusively shared by Old Saxon and either Old English or Old Frisian, [1] a genetic unity of the Anglo-Frisian languages beyond that of an Ingvaeonic subfamily cannot be considered a majority opinion. In fact, the groupings of Ingvaeonic and West Germanic languages are highly debated, even ...

  4. Frisian languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frisian_languages

    Thus the two languages have become less mutually intelligible over time, partly due to the influence which Dutch and Low German have had on Frisian, and partly due to the vast influence some languages (in particular Norman French) have had on English throughout the centuries. Old Frisian, [8] [page needed] however, was very similar to Old English.

  5. West Germanic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Germanic_languages

    Hans Frede Nielsen's 1981 study Old English and the Continental Germanic Languages [46] made the conviction grow that a West Germanic proto-language did exist. But up until the 1990s, some scholars doubted that there was once a Proto-West Germanic proto-language which was ancestral only to later West Germanic languages. [ 47 ]

  6. Old Norse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse

    Old English and Old Norse were related languages. It is therefore not surprising that many words in Old Norse look familiar to English speakers; e.g., armr (arm), fótr (foot), land (land), fullr (full), hanga (to hang), standa (to stand). This is because both English and Old Norse stem from a Proto-Germanic mother language.

  7. Brittonic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brittonic_languages

    The modern Brittonic languages are generally considered to all derive from a common ancestral language termed Brittonic, British, Common Brittonic, Old Brittonic or Proto-Brittonic, which is thought to have developed from Proto-Celtic or early Insular Celtic by the 6th century BC. [14]

  8. Germanic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_languages

    The linguistic contact of the Viking settlers of the Danelaw with the Anglo-Saxons left traces in the English language and is suspected to have facilitated the collapse of Old English grammar that, combined with the influx of Romance Old French vocabulary after the Norman Conquest, resulted in Middle English from the 12th century.

  9. Indo-European languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European_languages

    Gothic (the most archaic well-documented Germanic language, AD c. 350), along with the combined witness of the other old Germanic languages: most importantly, Old English (c. 800 –1000), Old High German (c. 750 –1000) and Old Norse (c. 1100 –1300 AD, with limited earlier sources dating to AD c. 200).