From: walker@btinternet.com   
      
   "Custos Custodum" wrote in message   
   news:vj1eo2drds9a21pn724p7noe5r1e0au71u@4ax.com...   
   > On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 09:21:56 -0000, "Walker"    
   > wrote:   
   >   
   >>   
   >>"Rocky3" wrote in message   
   >>news:12l0gtticm3xm$.f3zt1vx6veuw$.dlg@40tude.net...   
   >>> Hello!   
   >>> I wish to translate from English to Old English (Anglo-Saxon) these   
   >>> words:   
   >>>   
   >>> "Oh my wings!"   
   >>>   
   >>> How can I do it? Did Anglo-Saxons use "Oh"?   
   >>> "Wings" seems to be in the vocative: which is the Anglo-Saxon case?   
   >>> I found "min" for "my" and "fíðru" ("fithru" if you can read the special   
   >>> type) for "wings": are the right words in the right cases?   
   >>> Thank you in advance.   
   >>> Bye!   
   >>>   
   >>> Rocky3   
   >>>   
   >>Don't you mean Alt Platdeutch/Old Low German?   
   >   
   > No, he doesn't.   
   >   
   >>Old English, what on earth is that?   
   >   
   > The direct ancestor of the language we are using just now.   
      
   No it isn't. The language we speak now bears no relationship to any kind of   
   German, High or Low. English is entirely different from Low German,   
   including Anglo-Saxon. Where do you get your wierd ideas from?   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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