Sae is the the Old English ( West Saxon) form of "sea." There is also the modern English word sae, which is the Anglic dialect form of "so."
It means "the day of Saturn" or "Saturn's day." It is the Old English ancestor of our modern word Saturday.
Fisc is fish in modern English
The word 'ope' was not used in Old English, and is not used much in modern English. It is a type of pseudo-word used for 'open' in some redone versions of old literature.
Knight is a word in modern English which etymologically came from Old English, Dutch, and German roots. Because this word comes from Old English roots, it is not an example of an Anglicized word.
Sae is the the Old English ( West Saxon) form of "sea." There is also the modern English word sae, which is the Anglic dialect form of "so."
Thither is not an Old English word. It merely means "there" in Modern English as in hither and thither, "here and there".
"Oer" is the poetic license word for "over".
The old English word "dois" could be related to the modern English word "deuce," which refers to the number two in cards or dice. It is also used in sports to denote a tied score of 40-40 in tennis.
The Old English word "monath" means "month." It is the word from which the modern English term "month" is derived.
It means "the day of Saturn" or "Saturn's day." It is the Old English ancestor of our modern word Saturday.
Fisc is fish in modern English
In Old English they did not use the letter k but the word "cyle" is the Old English word for "cold".
The word 'ope' was not used in Old English, and is not used much in modern English. It is a type of pseudo-word used for 'open' in some redone versions of old literature.
The Old English/Norse word and the Modern English word are one in the same; hell=hell.
The letters unscramble into one modern word and one old English word:TwineWiten (Old English plural for "Wit")
Knight is a word in modern English which etymologically came from Old English, Dutch, and German roots. Because this word comes from Old English roots, it is not an example of an Anglicized word.