User:Tezamen/Sandbox

__NOINDEX__

Härjedalska

 * 

Drenthe

 * 

Het Utrechts-Alblasserwaards

 * → EN


 * |Eemlands → EN

Zuid-Hollands

 * Expand**


 * |Zuid-Hollands → |South_Hollandic

Sognamål

 * → NL

Lappfjärd

 * |Lappfjärd (no) → en
 * |Lappfjärd (sv) → en

Töre Älv

 * |Töre Älv (nl)
 * |Töre Älv (sv)
 * |Töre Älv (en)
 * |Töre Älv (nn)
 * Wellicht

Ongesorteerd

 * Move my 'Books' to my sandbox
 * Contributions/Created Articles


 * Add 'Planned' work


 * Add 'In-Progress' work


 * Töre → en

UB
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:UBX/Boilerplate

Vocabulary comparison
Several of the terms in the table below have had semantic drift. For example, the form Sterben and other terms for die are cognates with the English word starve. There is also at least one example of a common borrowing from a non-Germanic source (ounce and its cognates from Latin).

== Wiki_Boek_EN3 ==
 * AB language
 * Accusative case
 * Affirmative and negative
 * Agent (grammar)
 * Alfred the Great
 * Ancrene Wisse
 * Anglo-Frisian languages
 * Anglo-Norman language
 * Anglo-Saxon runes
 * Anglo-Saxons
 * Animacy
 * Article (grammar)
 * Associated motion
 * Ayenbite of Inwyt
 * Beowulf
 * Bodleian Library
 * Brandenburg
 * Brittonicisms in English
 * Classical Latin
 * Clusivity
 * Comparison (grammar)
 * Conjunction (grammar)
 * Cornish language
 * Cumbric language
 * Dative case
 * Definiteness
 * Dialect
 * Diphthong
 * Do-support
 * Double negative
 * Duchy of Schleswig
 * East Low German
 * Eastphalia
 * England
 * England–Wales border
 * English language
 * English languages
 * European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
 * Evidentiality
 * Exeter Book
 * Fingallian
 * Focus (linguistics)
 * Forth and Bargy dialect
 * Frisian languages
 * Genitive case
 * Geoffrey Chaucer
 * Germanic languages
 * Go (verb)
 * Grammatical aspect
 * Grammatical case
 * Grammatical category
 * Grammatical gender
 * Grammatical mood
 * Grammatical number
 * Grammatical person
 * Grammatical tense
 * High German languages
 * High Middle Ages
 * History of England
 * History of the English language
 * History of the Scots language
 * Holstein
 * House of Plantagenet
 * I-mutation
 * Indefinite pronoun
 * Indo-European languages
 * Inflection
 * Ingvaeonic languages
 * Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law
 * Instrumental case
 * Interrogative word
 * John Gower
 * John Purvey
 * John Wycliffe
 * Katherine Group
 * Kentish dialect (Old English)
 * Late Middle Ages
 * Latin alphabet
 * Latin influence in English
 * Latin script
 * Lingua franca
 * Linguistic modality
 * List of English words of Old Norse origin
 * List of Germanic languages
 * Lollardy
 * Low Franconian languages
 * Low German
 * Low Prussian dialect
 * Manuscript
 * Medieval Latin
 * Mercian dialect
 * Middle English
 * Middle English literature
 * Mirative
 * Modern English
 * Nominative case
 * Norman conquest of England
 * North Frisian language
 * North Germanic languages
 * Northern Low Saxon
 * Northumbria
 * Northumbrian dialect
 * Noun class
 * Old English
 * Old English phonology
 * Old Frisian
 * Old Saxon
 * Ormulum
 * Orthography
 * Pearl Poet
 * Relative pronoun
 * Runes
 * Saterland Frisian language
 * Scotland
 * Scots language
 * The Canterbury Tales
 * Topic–comment
 * Transitivity (grammar)
 * V2 word order
 * Valency (linguistics)
 * Voice (grammar)
 * Volition (linguistics)
 * West Country dialects
 * West Frisian language
 * West Germanic languages
 * West Saxon dialect (Old English)
 * Westphalia
 * William Caxton
 * William Langland
 * Word order
 * Wycliffe's Bible
 * Æthelwold of Winchester
 * Battle of Fulford
 * Battle of Stamford Bridge
 * Battle of Hastings
 * Harrying of the North
 * Revolt of the Earls
 * Proto-Indo-European language
 * Syncope (phonetics)

== Wiki_Boek_EN2 ==
 * AB language
 * Accusative case
 * Affirmative and negative
 * Agent (grammar)
 * Alfred the Great
 * Ancrene Wisse
 * Anglo-Frisian languages
 * Anglo-Norman language
 * Anglo-Saxon runes
 * Anglo-Saxons
 * Animacy
 * Article (grammar)
 * Associated motion
 * Ayenbite of Inwyt
 * Beowulf
 * Bodleian Library
 * Brandenburg
 * Brittonicisms in English
 * Classical Latin
 * Clusivity
 * Comparison (grammar)
 * Conjunction (grammar)
 * Cornish language
 * Cumbric language
 * Dative case
 * Definiteness
 * Dialect
 * Diphthong
 * Do-support
 * Double negative
 * Duchy of Schleswig
 * East Low German
 * Eastphalia
 * England
 * England–Wales border
 * English language
 * English languages
 * European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
 * Evidentiality
 * Exeter Book
 * Fingallian
 * Focus (linguistics)
 * Forth and Bargy dialect
 * Frisian languages
 * Genitive case
 * Geoffrey Chaucer
 * Germanic languages
 * Go (verb)
 * Grammatical aspect
 * Grammatical case
 * Grammatical category
 * Grammatical gender
 * Grammatical mood
 * Grammatical number
 * Grammatical person
 * Grammatical tense
 * High German languages
 * High Middle Ages
 * History of England
 * History of the English language
 * History of the Scots language
 * Holstein
 * House of Plantagenet
 * I-mutation
 * Indefinite pronoun
 * Indo-European languages
 * Inflection
 * Ingvaeonic languages
 * Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law
 * Instrumental case
 * Interrogative word
 * John Gower
 * John Purvey
 * John Wycliffe
 * Katherine Group
 * Kentish dialect (Old English)
 * Late Middle Ages
 * Latin alphabet
 * Latin influence in English
 * Latin script
 * Lingua franca
 * Linguistic modality
 * List of English words of Old Norse origin
 * List of Germanic languages
 * Lollardy
 * Low Franconian languages
 * Low German
 * Low Prussian dialect
 * Manuscript
 * Medieval Latin
 * Mercian dialect
 * Middle English
 * Middle English literature
 * Mirative
 * Modern English
 * Nominative case
 * Norman conquest of England
 * North Frisian language
 * North Germanic languages
 * Northern Low Saxon
 * Northumbria
 * Northumbrian dialect
 * Noun class
 * Old English
 * Old English phonology
 * Old Frisian
 * Old Saxon
 * Ormulum
 * Orthography
 * Pearl Poet
 * Relative pronoun
 * Runes
 * Saterland Frisian language
 * Scotland
 * Scots language
 * The Canterbury Tales
 * Topic–comment
 * Transitivity (grammar)
 * V2 word order
 * Valency (linguistics)
 * Voice (grammar)
 * Volition (linguistics)
 * West Country dialects
 * West Frisian language
 * West Germanic languages
 * West Saxon dialect (Old English)
 * Westphalia
 * William Caxton
 * William Langland
 * Word order
 * Wycliffe's Bible
 * Æthelwold of Winchester
 * Battle of Fulford
 * Battle of Stamford Bridge
 * Battle of Hastings
 * Harrying of the North
 * Revolt of the Earls

== Wiki_Boek_EN ==
 * AB language
 * Accusative case
 * Affirmative and negative
 * Agent (grammar)
 * Alfred the Great
 * Ancrene Wisse
 * Anglo-Frisian languages
 * Anglo-Norman language
 * Anglo-Saxon runes
 * Anglo-Saxons
 * Animacy
 * Article (grammar)
 * Associated motion
 * Ayenbite of Inwyt
 * Beowulf
 * Bodleian Library
 * Brandenburg
 * Brittonicisms in English
 * Classical Latin
 * Clusivity
 * Comparison (grammar)
 * Conjunction (grammar)
 * Cornish language
 * Cumbric language
 * Dative case
 * Definiteness
 * Dialect
 * Diphthong
 * Do-support
 * Double negative
 * Duchy of Schleswig
 * East Low German
 * Eastphalia
 * England
 * England–Wales border
 * English language
 * English languages
 * European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
 * Evidentiality
 * Exeter Book
 * Fingallian
 * Focus (linguistics)
 * Forth and Bargy dialect
 * Frisian languages
 * Genitive case
 * Geoffrey Chaucer
 * Germanic languages
 * Go (verb)
 * Grammatical aspect
 * Grammatical case
 * Grammatical category
 * Grammatical gender
 * Grammatical mood
 * Grammatical number
 * Grammatical person
 * Grammatical tense
 * High German languages
 * High Middle Ages
 * History of England
 * History of the English language
 * History of the Scots language
 * Holstein
 * House of Plantagenet
 * I-mutation
 * Indefinite pronoun
 * Indo-European languages
 * Inflection
 * Ingvaeonic languages
 * Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law
 * Instrumental case
 * Interrogative word
 * John Gower
 * John Purvey
 * John Wycliffe
 * Katherine Group
 * Kentish dialect (Old English)
 * Late Middle Ages
 * Latin alphabet
 * Latin influence in English
 * Latin script
 * Lingua franca
 * Linguistic modality
 * List of English words of Old Norse origin
 * List of Germanic languages
 * Lollardy
 * Low Franconian languages
 * Low German
 * Low Prussian dialect
 * Manuscript
 * Medieval Latin
 * Mercian dialect
 * Middle English
 * Middle English literature
 * Mirative
 * Modern English
 * Nominative case
 * Norman conquest of England
 * North Frisian language
 * North Germanic languages
 * Northern Low Saxon
 * Northumbria
 * Northumbrian dialect
 * Noun class
 * Old English
 * Old English phonology
 * Old Frisian
 * Old Saxon
 * Ormulum
 * Orthography
 * Pearl Poet
 * Relative pronoun
 * Runes
 * Saterland Frisian language
 * Scotland
 * Scots language
 * The Canterbury Tales
 * Topic–comment
 * Transitivity (grammar)
 * V2 word order
 * Valency (linguistics)
 * Voice (grammar)
 * Volition (linguistics)
 * West Country dialects
 * West Frisian language
 * West Germanic languages
 * West Saxon dialect (Old English)
 * Westphalia
 * William Caxton
 * William Langland
 * Word order
 * Wycliffe's Bible
 * Æthelwold of Winchester

== Wiki_Boek_EN ==
 * Accusative case
 * Affirmative and negative
 * Agent (grammar)
 * Alfred the Great
 * Anglo-Frisian languages
 * Anglo-Saxon runes
 * Anglo-Saxons
 * Animacy
 * Article (grammar)
 * Associated motion
 * Beowulf
 * Brandenburg
 * Brittonicisms in English
 * Classical Latin
 * Clusivity
 * Comparison (grammar)
 * Conjunction (grammar)
 * Cornish language
 * Cumbric language
 * Dative case
 * Definiteness
 * Dialect
 * Diphthong
 * Do-support
 * Double negative
 * Duchy of Schleswig
 * East Low German
 * Eastphalia
 * England–Wales border
 * English language
 * English languages
 * European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
 * Evidentiality
 * Exeter Book
 * Fingallian
 * Focus (linguistics)
 * Forth and Bargy dialect
 * Frisian languages
 * Genitive case
 * Germanic languages
 * Go (verb)
 * Grammatical aspect
 * Grammatical case
 * Grammatical category
 * Grammatical gender
 * Grammatical mood
 * Grammatical number
 * Grammatical person
 * Grammatical tense
 * High German languages
 * History of the Scots language
 * Holstein
 * I-mutation
 * Indefinite pronoun
 * Indo-European languages
 * Inflection
 * Ingvaeonic languages
 * Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law
 * Instrumental case
 * Interrogative word
 * Kentish dialect (Old English)
 * Latin alphabet
 * Latin influence in English
 * Latin script
 * Lingua franca
 * Linguistic modality
 * List of English words of Old Norse origin
 * List of Germanic languages
 * Low Franconian languages
 * Low German
 * Low Prussian dialect
 * Mercian dialect
 * Mirative
 * Modern English
 * Nominative case
 * North Frisian language
 * North Germanic languages
 * Northern Low Saxon
 * Northumbrian dialect
 * Noun class
 * Old English
 * Old English phonology
 * Old Frisian
 * Old Saxon
 * Relative pronoun
 * Runes
 * Saterland Frisian language
 * Scots language
 * Topic–comment
 * Transitivity (grammar)
 * V2 word order
 * Valency (linguistics)
 * Voice (grammar)
 * Volition (linguistics)
 * West Country dialects
 * West Frisian language
 * West Germanic languages
 * West Saxon dialect (Old English)
 * Westphalia
 * Word order
 * Æthelwold of Winchester