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  2. Old Norse morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse_morphology

    Old Norse has three categories of verbs (strong, weak, & present-preterite) and two categories of nouns (strong, weak). Conjugation and declension are carried out by a mix of inflection and two nonconcatenative morphological processes: umlaut, a backness-based alteration to the root vowel; and ablaut, a replacement of the root vowel, in verbs.

  3. Old Norse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse

    Old Norse, also referred to as ... When a noun, pronoun, adjective, or verb has a long vowel or diphthong in the accented syllable and its stem ends in a single l, n ...

  4. Old English grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_English_grammar

    However, in stressed positions, the plural third-person personal pronouns were all replaced with Old Norse forms during the Middle English period, yielding "they", "them" and "their". (The Old English dative pronoun is retained as unstressed ' em .)

  5. List of English words of Old Norse origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_English_words_of...

    Possibly from Old Norse krasa (="shatter") via Old French crasir [55] creek kriki ("corner, nook") through ME creke ("narrow inlet in a coastline") altered from kryk perhaps influenced by Anglo-Norman crique itself from a Scandinavian source via Norman-French [56] crochet from Old Norse krokr "hook" via French crochet "small hook; canine tooth ...

  6. Northern Subject Rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_subject_rule

    The Northern Subject Rule is a grammatical pattern that occurs in Northern English and Scots dialects. [1] Present-tense verbs may take the verbal ‑s suffix, except when they are directly adjacent to one of the personal pronouns I, you, we, or they as their subject.

  7. They - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/They

    Old English had a single third-person pronoun hē, which had both singular and plural forms, and they wasn't among them. In or about the start of the 13th century, they was imported from a Scandinavian source (Old Norse þeir, Old Danish, Old Swedish þer, þair), in which it was a masculine plural demonstrative pronoun.

  8. Proto-Norse language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Norse_language

    Proto-Norse was an Indo-European language spoken in Scandinavia that is thought to have evolved as a northern dialect of Proto-Germanic in the first centuries CE. It is the earliest stage of a characteristically North Germanic language, and the language attested in the oldest Scandinavian Elder Futhark inscriptions, spoken from around the 2nd to the 8th centuries CE (corresponding to the late ...

  9. Shetland dialect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shetland_dialect

    The letters j and k are used rather than y and c, influenced by Norse spelling. The letter j is often used to render the semivowel /j/ of the letter y , especially for the palatalised consonants in words such as Yule in English— rendered Yuil in Scots— which becomes written Jøl in Shetland dialect (for the additional change of the Scots ui ...