Middle English tung

The Middle English tung (Middle English: Englysshe, Early Scots: Inglis) is an offspring of Old English and the forerunner to Early Modern English. It was spoken in England from the 12th-yearhundred, after the Hild at Hastings, to the 15th-yearhundred. Like Old English, it is a West Theedish tung; however, it has much hoard from Angle-Northman, and hoard from Evelandish French in the later years.

Norman Ingang
The overgang from Old English to Middle English began when Earl William William of Normandy infelt England in 1066 and overcame the House of Wessex. After the Norman ingang, the English erd-folk were unshrithed from elderdom, and the stock tung, the Wessex Byleid, which had been deemed as the mean tung throughout England yearhundreds beforehand, was no longer being spoken by the ethels, and was edstowen by Angle-Norman. This begat much frothering in English Byleids thereafter, as those who had overseen the of English could no longer do so once the Normans overcame and edstew the fore-running Ethels. The yeomen and wonted folk still spoke English after the Norman Ingang of England (the Normans deemed English as a "low-brow" tung unfit for them), but much inflood from Angle-Norman came into English, as the English had begun to the Normans, causing many Norman words to flow into English. would not be spoken by the Ethels again until the 14th-yearhundred, when the Hundred Years' Wye broke out; by that time, however, the inbringings from Northmen French had already taken its toll on the English tung.