[MR] in search of Old English

Lady Alexandra Scott xndra_scott at yahoo.com
Sun Mar 1 12:33:40 PST 2009


M'Lady ~
 
Try this site.  http://www.oldenglishtranslator.co.uk/index.htm
 
Depending on your use of the terminology, whether you mean the tower itself or the purpose (treason), you may find your need here.  










Lady Alexandra

Alexandra Scott de Northumberland
Argent, a stag statant and on a chief azure an increscent between two mullets of six points Or
Canton of Aire Faucon
Barony of Sacred Stone
Kingdom of ATLANTIA
 
 

--- On Sat, 2/28/09, atlantia-request at atlantia.sca.org <atlantia-request at atlantia.sca.org> wrote:


Message: 10
Date: Sat, 28 Feb 2009 03:47:05 -0500
From: Miriel <miriel.crawford at gmail.com>
Subject: [MR] in search of Old English help
To: Atlantia <atlantia at atlantia.sca.org>
Message-ID:
	<678a1ac50902280047k4b19b90by62addd12f74410b9 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Greetings unto the tavern this early morning.  I am in search of someone
with some knowledge of Old English, specifically a phrase that means "High
Tower".

Thank you for your assistance in this small matter


Miriel

-- 
"There but for the grace of a demented deity, go I"  - Tales of the
Folly,
by A. Fesler

http://miriels-place.tripod.com/ new stuff added


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