User blog comment:Eðkee/After having called on þis site for going on two or þree years now, I step forþ to offer my help./@comment-70.15.1.113-20171229233231

þe -ed is from old english -ode, following þelowering in stress.Go to wiktionary to see þis (put in -ed)

i þwear (agree) wiþ þe "feminine " ending, but -ess is from French, and it "displaced" or outsteaded þe germanicending -en, and i hold (in þis way to hold means to þink an opinion-read us constitution for byspel noting (usage),

it is from old english hit, hwich was (and is nueter), but þreap (correct) me if þou þincest oþerwisely

þe formel_informal þing was not in old english, and is not germanic. i hold þat you must be said for þe accusative ye only, (it is from eower, accusitve ge)formalness in pronouns came from Frencg, but was sely (fortunately ) lost into modern english

þe infinitive had no set one in old english or oþer early germanic speeches, but þe -en in dutch (german) and oþer germanic speech verb ending were from þe class two verbs ad it merged in all oþer germanic speeches but english. þis ending was cept in its proto germanic "state" making verbs from nouns/adjectives, byspel- hard to harden cwic to cwicen and so forþ þere were /are oþer ending cept in english not in  oþer germanic speeches,  such as þe umlaut-se ending, byspel clean to cleanse,  blood to bless and a few oþer obsolete verbs