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What is the name of this Middle English letter?

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What is the name of this Middle English letter?


So many Romanian words seem to end in “u”Origin and meaning of the surname “Babjak”What is the origin and meaning of the word/name “Idora”? (Shortened)What is the underlying meaning of the English 'of'?Do we know anything more about the semantic shift of “with” in Middle English?Etymology of the place name ChattaroyWhat linguistic impact, if any, has the the Roman three name naming system left on modern Romance and European languages?What is the etymology of “Tarim” as in “Tarim Basin” and does it relate to Tocharian?Are the German words wer/was “who/what” derived from the q. word wo “where” + pns. er/es “he/it” by analogy with the Old Slavonic koi/chto “who/what”?Relations between 'fons' and 'frons'













2















The meaning of the depicted letter, in my opinion, is "and", but what is its (page 61) Mk.1:15 name?



enter image description here










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IwantToKnow is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1





    I think it's a form of ampersand

    – Colin Fine
    6 hours ago
















2















The meaning of the depicted letter, in my opinion, is "and", but what is its (page 61) Mk.1:15 name?



enter image description here










share|improve this question









New contributor



IwantToKnow is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.














  • 1





    I think it's a form of ampersand

    – Colin Fine
    6 hours ago














2












2








2








The meaning of the depicted letter, in my opinion, is "and", but what is its (page 61) Mk.1:15 name?



enter image description here










share|improve this question









New contributor



IwantToKnow is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











The meaning of the depicted letter, in my opinion, is "and", but what is its (page 61) Mk.1:15 name?



enter image description here







etymology






share|improve this question









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IwantToKnow is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









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IwantToKnow is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 6 hours ago







IwantToKnow













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asked 6 hours ago









IwantToKnowIwantToKnow

112




112




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Check out our Code of Conduct.









  • 1





    I think it's a form of ampersand

    – Colin Fine
    6 hours ago













  • 1





    I think it's a form of ampersand

    – Colin Fine
    6 hours ago








1




1





I think it's a form of ampersand

– Colin Fine
6 hours ago






I think it's a form of ampersand

– Colin Fine
6 hours ago











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














It's an ampersand, which nowadays looks like &. The version in this text is a combination of E and t, because the Latin word for "and" is et.




& ſaide, þat þe tyme is fulfillid

& the kyngdome of god ſthal come

nyȝ, do ȝe penance; & bileue ȝe to

þe goſpel, and as he paſſide biſi

des þe ſee of galile, he ſaye ſym




In modern spelling:




and said, that the time is fulfilled,

and the kingdom of God shall come

nigh, do ye penance; and believe ye to

the Gospel, and as he passed besi-

-de the Sea of Galilee, he saw Sim-




I'm pretty sure the y in the second-last word is an outright error; it should be a u.






share|improve this answer

























  • It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

    – IwantToKnow
    5 hours ago











  • @IwantToKnow typo fixed

    – Draconis
    5 hours ago











Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














It's an ampersand, which nowadays looks like &. The version in this text is a combination of E and t, because the Latin word for "and" is et.




& ſaide, þat þe tyme is fulfillid

& the kyngdome of god ſthal come

nyȝ, do ȝe penance; & bileue ȝe to

þe goſpel, and as he paſſide biſi

des þe ſee of galile, he ſaye ſym




In modern spelling:




and said, that the time is fulfilled,

and the kingdom of God shall come

nigh, do ye penance; and believe ye to

the Gospel, and as he passed besi-

-de the Sea of Galilee, he saw Sim-




I'm pretty sure the y in the second-last word is an outright error; it should be a u.






share|improve this answer

























  • It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

    – IwantToKnow
    5 hours ago











  • @IwantToKnow typo fixed

    – Draconis
    5 hours ago















2














It's an ampersand, which nowadays looks like &. The version in this text is a combination of E and t, because the Latin word for "and" is et.




& ſaide, þat þe tyme is fulfillid

& the kyngdome of god ſthal come

nyȝ, do ȝe penance; & bileue ȝe to

þe goſpel, and as he paſſide biſi

des þe ſee of galile, he ſaye ſym




In modern spelling:




and said, that the time is fulfilled,

and the kingdom of God shall come

nigh, do ye penance; and believe ye to

the Gospel, and as he passed besi-

-de the Sea of Galilee, he saw Sim-




I'm pretty sure the y in the second-last word is an outright error; it should be a u.






share|improve this answer

























  • It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

    – IwantToKnow
    5 hours ago











  • @IwantToKnow typo fixed

    – Draconis
    5 hours ago













2












2








2







It's an ampersand, which nowadays looks like &. The version in this text is a combination of E and t, because the Latin word for "and" is et.




& ſaide, þat þe tyme is fulfillid

& the kyngdome of god ſthal come

nyȝ, do ȝe penance; & bileue ȝe to

þe goſpel, and as he paſſide biſi

des þe ſee of galile, he ſaye ſym




In modern spelling:




and said, that the time is fulfilled,

and the kingdom of God shall come

nigh, do ye penance; and believe ye to

the Gospel, and as he passed besi-

-de the Sea of Galilee, he saw Sim-




I'm pretty sure the y in the second-last word is an outright error; it should be a u.






share|improve this answer















It's an ampersand, which nowadays looks like &. The version in this text is a combination of E and t, because the Latin word for "and" is et.




& ſaide, þat þe tyme is fulfillid

& the kyngdome of god ſthal come

nyȝ, do ȝe penance; & bileue ȝe to

þe goſpel, and as he paſſide biſi

des þe ſee of galile, he ſaye ſym




In modern spelling:




and said, that the time is fulfilled,

and the kingdom of God shall come

nigh, do ye penance; and believe ye to

the Gospel, and as he passed besi-

-de the Sea of Galilee, he saw Sim-




I'm pretty sure the y in the second-last word is an outright error; it should be a u.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 5 hours ago

























answered 5 hours ago









DraconisDraconis

14.1k12258




14.1k12258












  • It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

    – IwantToKnow
    5 hours ago











  • @IwantToKnow typo fixed

    – Draconis
    5 hours ago

















  • It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

    – IwantToKnow
    5 hours ago











  • @IwantToKnow typo fixed

    – Draconis
    5 hours ago
















It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

– IwantToKnow
5 hours ago





It seems to me that on the screenshot depicted the word ſthal in ſhal stead

– IwantToKnow
5 hours ago













@IwantToKnow typo fixed

– Draconis
5 hours ago





@IwantToKnow typo fixed

– Draconis
5 hours ago










IwantToKnow is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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IwantToKnow is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











IwantToKnow is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














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