Central - LAL | nt in a halely different wey. | Siblike | , whaur it can be fykie tae ow |
Central - LAL | y” and “tomorrow” hae a | siblike | definitive feel, which isnae |
Central - GLA | Ma | siblike | freends are stoic men |
Central - EDN | s bease lat us be aefauld and | siblike | i’ the fecht. Aa men is fae |
Central - WCE | n me as Whit, quo Whit tae me | siblike | , |
Central - LAL | syne. These sites aw conteen | siblike | early style Pechtish symbols, |
Central - LAL | studyin “the German”. In | siblike | mainner, Gaelic refers tae it |
Central - LAL | final stanza ends the poem in | siblike | vein, heizin their female fre |
Central - LAL | anonymous poems is drookit in | siblike | dingiein or dingin doon o the |
Central - LAL | As a non-English exemple o | siblike | language varieties, we micht |
Central - LAL | rculation. Mairower, there is | siblike | evidence fae elsewhaur in the |
Central - LAL | nd-wife pairins whase luve is | siblike | owergaen by thon which exists |
Central - LAL | modern Scots). Here, Scots is | siblike | tae ither Germanic leids, sic |
Central - LAL | nimal figurines that luik gey | siblike | tae some o the beasts cairvit |
Central - LAL | glish spak with significantly | siblike | US phonology forby US-specifi |