How To Use Middle english In A Sentence
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Eric is also a polymath ( "he mastered the steepest matters in half an afternoon") who studies Einstein's special theory in both German and English, reads poetry, contemplates the Middle English roots of the word "hangnail" and works out faithfully (a universal trait of the protagonists of cheap thrillers).
All Day in a Rich Guy's Limo Makes for a Very Silly Novel
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Etymology: Middle English braundisshen, from Anglo-French brandiss-, stem of brandir, from brant, braund sword, of Germanic origin; akin to Old English brand
The Volokh Conspiracy » More on gun registration, and guns at POTUS speeches:
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In this it contrasts with the accentual four-stress line of Old English and Middle English alliterative verse, in which the caesura is expected to fall in the middle of the line.
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The use of the term corned comes from the fact that the Middle English word corn could refer to grains of salt as well as cereal grains.
Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
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SAVE THE POUND (avoirdupois) If the word avoirdupois sounds a bit foreign too it is from French and Middle English (Anglo-French) avoir de pois, "goods of weight" or "goods sold by weight".
Archive 2007-10-21
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The very word industry comes from the Middle English word industrie, or skill, and from the Latin industria, or diligence.
We don’t sell records,we sell dreams: Janis Ian
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'Sendon' or 'Sindon' from Latin 'sindon,' Greek sindon 'fine cloth, linen' was used in Middle English for a fine cloth, especially one used as a shroud.
Languagehat.com: SYNDONIA.
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Mr. Dean, who as a young father regaled his daughters with passages from Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales" in Middle English and fed the girls plump blueberries from the back yard, died of a brain aneurysm Dec. 2 at Virginia Hospital Center in Arlington County.
A Local Life: Alan L. Dean, 92, the 'Ideal Father'
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Middle English is the English language from about 1100 to 1500
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The word "tickle" comes from the Middle English tickelen, which it's believed came from ticken, to touch lightly.
Archive 2009-04-01
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The word forbear comes from the Middle English forberen, thence from the Old English forberan, both meaning to endure or to get through something, and to do so with grace and dignity.
Beyond the Fields We Know
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Middle English was spoken from about AD 1100 to 1450.
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Reverse: Middle English revers, from Old French, from Latin reversus.
BWE SLANG: The “Reverse Savage” | Best Week Ever
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It is one of the most admired of all Middle English romances nowadays, because of its narrative coherence and life and the sustained interest of its action.
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The term trust has been cited in history as far back as the 13 th century Middle English, but it has etymological origins even earlier with regard to expressions of loyalty and faithfulness (Mollering, Bachmann, & Lee, 2004).
BeyeNETWORK Content
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Etymology: Middle English skopper - (in compounds), perhaps from Anglo-French * escopoir, from escopir to spit out
Think Progress » Analysis: Strong Carbon Cap Would Cut Iran’s Petrodollars By Over $100 Million A Day
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The word holiday originally came from Holy Day, and the root meaning of holy goes back to the Middle English holi, a variation of Old English hālig, hāleg or hāl, which translates to whole.
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com
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[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin sacrificium: sacer, sacred; see SACRED + facere, to make.]
A Few (?) Thoughts About Samhain and Sacrifice
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As it happens, English-speakers did employ the word guerre toward the end of the Middle English period, and they kept it in circulation for roughly ten generations.
The English Is Coming!
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All these meanings have been associated with the notion of trance, a word etymologically rooted to the Middle English traunce, the Old French transe, and the Latin transpire, which refer to a passage or means of going over or across.
The Bushman Way of Tracking God
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Etymology: Middle English conversacioun, from Anglo-French conversacion, from Latin conversation -, conversatio, from conversari to associate with, frequentative of convertere to turn around
Pirates! Man your Women!
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Oh, and the word javelin comes from Middle English and it derives from Old French javeline a diminutive of javelot which meant spear.
China, Bound
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Modern English comes from the East Midland dialect of Middle English.
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Here are some events that changed the language in its phases as Middle English (from 1066 to 1500) and Early Modern English (1500 to 1800):
The English Is Coming!
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The story begins with the Middle English word broche, from the Latin brocca, spike, with the o pronounced as in Oh, yeah?
No Uncertain Terms
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One possibility is that it comes from the Middle English word bene, which means “a prayer” or “a favor” and is related to the more familiar word boon.
2009 May « Musings from an overworked translator
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Middle English shows all the typical signs of creolization and so a number of oddities appear and internal logic disappears.
The Volokh Conspiracy » Hisself, My Son, and a Thought About Prescriptivism:
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ETYMOLOGY: Possibly alteration of crutch and partly from Middle English croche, crook, crosier from Old French croche, hook, shepherd's crook, feminine of croc, hook; see crochet.
"What Britney's Crotch Did To My Stats."
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Middle English, from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French, acolit, from Medieval Latin acoluthus, from Middle Greek akolouthos, from Greek, adjective, following, from a -, ha - together (akin to Greek homos same) + keleuthos path
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The word saunter, like many others, can't be traced back very far (AHD: Probably from Middle English santren, to muse), but of course that doesn't stop people from trying, and this word has a particularly enjoyable pseudo-etymology, discussed in the following typically piquant passage from one of the stories in Kim Stanley Robinson's The Martians (a book I recommend to anyone who likes thoughtful, human-oriented science fiction):Long walks around Odessa at the end of the day.
Languagehat.com: SAUNTER.
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Etymology: Middle English loyne, from Middle French loigne, from (assumed) Vulgar Latin lumbea, from Latin lumbus; akin to Old English lendenu loins, Old Church Slavonic ledvije
Loins and determination
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[Middle English catirpel, catirpeller, probably alteration of Old North French * catepelose: cate, cat (from Latin cattus) + pelose, hairy (from Latin pilsus; see pilose).]
French Word-A-Day
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Chatterton claimed to have transcribed this poetry, which was written in a plausible pastiche of late Middle English, from old parchments found in the muniment room of the parish church of St. Mary Redcliffe, where his father had been a lay clerk.
The Marvelous Boy
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His placing of the location of numerous Gothic, Celtic, and other early manuscripts is a virtual travel guide to Old and Middle English biblical manuscripts.
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Thus the assumption of a substantial diglossia in Anglo-Saxon England helps to explain why, after the removal of the Anglo-Saxon elite, Middle English dialect writing appears to feature such "sudden" innovations emanating or radiating from the two focal centres in the North and in the South West.
Languagehat.com: FREE HIGHBEAM TRIAL.
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Referring to the root of belief in Middle English (lief, meaning "wish"), he said that belief is a heartfelt wish that things be or turn out a certain way; in other words, there is a way things should be and a way they shouldn't be, and belief is a wish that they be the way they "should.
Ed Gurowitz, Ph.D.: Belief Is Easy, But Faith Takes Discipline
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My friend was an English major back in the day, and the ceremony was filled with extended readings — some in Middle English — from First Samuel and First Corinthians, Plato, Shakespeare, Oscar Wilde and William Meredith, as well as traditional and popular music from when the two of them were young.
A wedding like any other
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Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin sacrificium, from sacr -, sacer + facere to make -- more at DO
McCain Apologizes For Saying American Lives "Wasted"
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The Concise Oxford Dictionary says that "fool" in its usual sense is Middle English, from Old French, from Latin 'follis' meaning 'bellows or empty-headed person'.
July recipe: Gooseberry fool
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The Middle English word (in the sense of "builder") was wright (from the Old English wryhta), which could be used in compound forms such as wheelwright or boatwright. [
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Just begging to be used as a hero's name :- The "Wester" element looks recognisably Old English, but the "falcon" or "falca" bit looks to me like it could derive from Latin 'falco', which is where we get the modern English 'falcon' but via Middle English and Old French.
Aelle of Deira
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So it is that an untitled Arthurian romance from the fourteenth century, in Middle English, has come to be known as Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
A Successful Defiance
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Written in a discursive Middle English, it has inspired several rewrites in modern times, including T.H. White's "The Once and Future King" (1958), the first part of which became the 1963 Disney movie "The Sword in the Stone," and John Steinbeck's "Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights" (1976).
Arthurian Glories Renewed
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The last document in OE, an annal of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle dated 1154, shows features of early Middle English.
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Of the Middle English poets, Chaucer is the one who displays most knowledge of wine, although he tends to mention different wines only briefly.
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According to Merriam-Webster's Dictionary the word crone dates back to the fourteenth century and is a Middle English term of abuse.
ABC News: ABCNews
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Old English cwene, akin to the etymon of queen]. rig [Middle English riggen, of uncertain derivation] dialectal English; cf. riggish ` sluttish, 'as in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra, where Enobarbus speaks thus of Cleopatra:
VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol VIII No 3
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[Middle English, related to Middle Dutch craghe, Middle Low German krage 'neck, throat']
The Guardian World News
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Some of it is maybe "agenbite of inwit," the Middle English phrase meaning remorse of conscience.
Rectitude Chic
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Middle English, from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French, acolit, from Medieval Latin acoluthus, from Middle Greek akolouthos, from Greek, adjective, following, from a -, ha - together (akin to Greek homos same) + keleuthos path
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Middle English was spoken from about AD 1100 to 1450.
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To speak with only words derived from the english lineage, such as anglo-saxon-jute, old english, middle english, is practically impossible for modern americans.
Think Progress » Right-Wing Mayor Calls for McDonald’s Boycott Over Spanish-Language Ads
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Unsurprisingly, there were some pretty inventive ways of saying it, such as nill — from which the term willy-nilly (literally meaning “will he, won’t he” in Middle English) is derived.
Preposterous Apostrophes VII: Why Won’t Willn’t Work? « Motivated Grammar
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It's arguably the first work of English Literature -- though, as it's written in Middle English, you probably won't be able to read it here's a sample:
John Lundberg: Want To Read The Original 'Beowulf' Manuscript? There's An App For That
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An article1 by Nanna Rognvaldardottir, an Icelandic food expert, states that the drink adopted the nog part of its name from the word noggin, a Middle English phrase used to describe a small, wooden, carved mug used to serve alcohol.
Like the new bowl. - Lolcats 'n' Funny Pictures of Cats - I Can Has Cheezburger?
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The Normans' attempt to foist their language on their subjects would eventually result in the mongrelism of Middle English which explains modern English's glut of synonyms.
Gothic buildings: pillars of faith
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In fact, the word "aquitane" is a corruption of the Middle English word for "aqualung.
Crackpot Medieval "Facts"
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The word derives from a Middle English expression, trenden, meaning to revolve.
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Hell, I even hesitate to use the adjective "niggardly" -- an absolutely legitimate word dating back to Middle English -- for fear that it and/or I will be misunderstood.
To Ban or Not to Ban? A Lesson Taken From J-101 Class
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The very word "industry" comes from the Middle English word "industrie", or skill, and from the Latin "industria", or diligence.
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Some of it is maybe "agenbite of inwit," the Middle English phrase meaning remorse of conscience.
Rectitude Chic
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It's EYE-as, and the etymology turns out to be worth knowing as well: Middle English eias, from an eias, alteration of *a nias, an eyas, from Old French niais, from Latin ni:dus, nest; see sed- in Indo-European roots AHD.
Languagehat.com: EYAS.
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Middle English, from past participle of sacren to consecrate, from Anglo-French sacrer, from Latin sacrare, from sacr-, sacer sacred; akin to Latin sancire to make sacred, Hittite šaklāi- rite
LDS Temple Ceremony goes Prime Time. | Mind on Fire
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Well, Nanna Rognvaldardottir of Iceland, in her article on the history of eggnog, states that the drink adopted the nog part of its name from the word noggin, a Middle English phrase used to describe a small, wooden, carved mug in which to serve alcohol.
Archive 2007-12-01