Category:Articles containing Old English (ca. 450-1100)-language text
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This category contains articles with Old English-language text. The primary purpose of these categories is to facilitate manual or automated checking of text in other languages.
This category should only be added with the {{Lang}} family of templates, never explicitly.
For example {{Lang|ang|text in Old English (ca. 450-1100) language here}}
, which wraps the text with <span lang="ang">
. Also available is {{Langx|ang|text in Old English (ca. 450-1100) language here}}
which displays as Old English: text in Old English (ca. 450-1100) language here.
Pages in category "Articles containing Old English (ca. 450-1100)-language text"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,413 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
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- Featherstone
- Featherstonhaugh
- Félag
- Female
- Fennel
- Ferret
- Fess
- Fewer versus less
- Fieldfare
- Final-obstruent devoicing
- Finn (ethnonym)
- Finnic peoples
- Finns
- Finwë and Míriel
- Fishbourne, West Sussex
- Fitt (poetry)
- Flatworm
- Fleet, Dorset
- River Fleet
- Flemish dialects
- Flood
- Flyting
- Fogou
- For a Swarm of Bees
- For Delayed Birth
- For Loss or Theft of Cattle
- For Water-Elf Disease
- Fortnight
- Fortriu
- Fosse Way
- Fotmal
- Fowl
- Fowler (surname)
- France
- Francization
- Franks
- Freeland, Oxfordshire
- Frei-Laubersheim fibula
- Freyr
- Friday
- Friday Street, London
- Frigg
- Frisians
- Frithuswith
- Fróði
- Froe
- Frog
- Frying pan
- Furlong
G
- Galdr
- Gallon
- Galwegian Gaelic
- Gang
- Garðaríki
- Gavel
- Geats
- Gender neutrality in languages with gendered third-person pronouns
- Genisteae
- Ġēolamonaþ
- Gepids
- Germanic a-mutation
- Germanic boar helmet
- Germanic dragon
- Germanic heroic legend
- Germanic law
- Germanic name
- Germanic strong verb
- Germanic umlaut
- Germanic verbs
- Germanic weak verb
- Gevninge helmet fragment
- Giant
- Gil-galad
- Gilmerton
- Gimli (Middle-earth)
- Ginger
- Girl
- Glan (Gurk)
- Glastonbury
- Glastonbury Tor
- Gleadless
- Glossary of sound laws in the Indo-European languages
- God (word)
- Lady Godiva
- Gododdin
- Godwin, Earl of Wessex
- Gofraid mac Amlaíb meic Ragnaill
- Gollum
- Gong farmer
- Good and evil
- Good Friday
- Gospel
- The gospel
- Gothic declension
- Gothic language
- Government in Anglo-Saxon England
- Graf
- Grammaticalization
- Graveship
- Great Britain
- Great Heathen Army
- Great Linford
- Grendel
- Grendel's mother
- Grey
- Greyhound
- Grits
- Gropecunt Lane
- Guilden Morden boar
- Guthlac of Crowland
- Guthrum
- River Gwash
- Gypsum
- Gytha of Wessex
H
- Habergham Eaves
- Hæþcyn
- Hag
- Hair
- Hakon Sweynson
- Halfdan Ragnarsson
- Hāliġmōnaþ
- Haliurunas
- John Richard Clark Hall
- Ham
- Ham, Plymouth
- Heime
- Háma (disambiguation)
- Hameldon Hill
- Hamilton, South Lanarkshire
- Hamlet (place)
- Hamoaze
- Hampshire
- Hanger
- Haplology
- Hapton, Lancashire
- Hardwicke, Stroud
- Harrowing of Hell
- Hartshorne, Derbyshire
- Harvest
- Haslar
- Battle of Hastings
- Battle of Hatfield Chase
- Hawarden
- Hay-on-Wye
- Healfdene
- Heathen holidays
- Hebrew language
- Hedera helix
- Hel (location)
- Heliand
- Hell and Middle-earth
- Hemp
- Henge
- Hereswith
- Herla
- Hertford
- Hessle and Hill Top
- Hiberno-English
- Hide (unit)
- High German consonant shift
- High-reeve
- Historical ecology
- History of Anglo-Saxon England
- History of cleavage
- History of cricket
- History of silk
- History of the British farthing
- History of the constitution of the United Kingdom
- History of the English monarchy
- History of the Lord's Prayer in English
- History of the British peerage
- History of the Royal Navy (before 1707)
- Hlothhere of Kent
- Hob (folklore)
- Hockerton
- Hogmanay
- Holcombe, Greater Manchester
- Holly
- Holt, Wrexham
- Holtzmann's law
- Holy Spirit
- Hörgr
- Horley
- Horns of Moses
- Hoscar
- Hosier (surname)
- Hour
- Housecarl
- Howe (surname)
- Hrethel
- Hrothgar
- Humber
- Hunnselva
- Hurstwood
- Hus
- Husband
- Husbandman
- Husting
- Hutton, Somerset
- Hwicce