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How Do You Say Tomorrow In Old English? [Solved]

From Middle English tomorwe, tomorwen, from Old English tō morgne (“tomorrow”, adverb), from tō (“at, on”) + morgne (dative of morgen (“morning”)), from Proto-Germanic *murganaz (“morning”), perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *mergʰ- (“to blink, to twinkle”), equivalent to to- +‎ morrow.

What Shakespeare’s English Sounded Like - and how we know

Botched rhymes, buried puns and a staged accent that sounds more Victorian than Elizabethan. No more! Use linguistic sleuthing …

Learn these old English expressions!

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Roger Whittaker - The Last Farewell 1975

Roger Whittaker - The Last Farewell 1975 There’s a ship lies rigged and ready in the harbour