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Middle English Translator

Translate modern English into the tongue of Chaucer, the Gawain poet, and medieval England. Hear the words of the Canterbury Tales, explore archaic vocabulary, and journey back to the age of knights and courtly love.

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English to Middle English Translator
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Middle English Word Keyboard
Ich (I)
Thou (You)
Thee (You obj.)
Ye (You pl.)
Hir (Her)
The
A
Thys (This)
That
Whych (Which)
Enter
Space

Translation Speed

0.8s

Instant Middle English rendering

Voice Playback

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ME Keyboard

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Middle English Vocabulary Guide

Words from the mouths of Chaucer, Langland, and the Gawain poet

Ich / I
I (subject)
[itch] – First person singular
Thou / Thee
You (singular)
[thow] – Intimate second person
Herte
Heart
[hehr-teh] – The seat of emotion
Knyght
Knight
[k-nee-ght] – Armoured warrior
Fayre
Fair / Beautiful
[fay-reh] – Beautiful, just
Speketh
Speaks
[spek-eth] – Third person verb ending
Goode
Good
[goo-deh] – Virtuous, excellent
Swich
Such
[switch] – Of that kind
Everich
Every / Each
[ev-er-itch] – Each and every
Anon
At once / Soon
[ah-non] – Immediately
Prithee
Please / Pray thee
[prih-thee] – I pray you
Whan
When
[whan] – At the time that
Forsooth
Indeed / Truly
[for-sooth] – In truth
Merry
Merry / Pleasant
[meh-ree] – Joyful, pleasant

Middle English Phrasebook

Click any card to load the modern English into the translator

Good day, how are you?
Goode day, how art thou?
Goo-deh day, how art thow?
I love you with all my heart
Ich love thee with al myn herte
Itch luv-eh thee with al min hehr-teh
The knight rides through the forest
The knyght rideth thurgh the forest
The k-nee-ght rid-eth thurgh the for-est
Tell me a story
Telle me a tale, prithee
Tel-leh me a tale, prih-thee
Where are you going?
Whither goest thou?
Hwi-ther go-est thow?
God be with you
God be with thee
God bee with thee
What a beautiful day
What a fayre and merry day thys is
What a fay-reh and meh-ree day this is
I do not understand
Ich ne understonde nat
Itch neh un-der-ston-deh nat

Pronunciation Guide

Key rules for reading Middle English aloud

All vowels
Pronounced fully
Final -e is usually spoken: "name" = "nah-meh"
gh
Guttural [ch]
"Night" = "nee-cht" (like Scottish "loch")
i / y
Like "ee"
"myn" = "meen", "knyght" = "k-neeght"
ou / ow
Like "oo"
"hous" = "hoos" (not "how-z")
-eth ending
Third person verb
"he speketh" = he speaks
wh-
Pronounced [hw]
"whan" = "hwan" (breathy w)

About Middle English

The language of Chaucer, Langland, and the medieval courts

Middle English was spoken in England from approximately 1100 to 1500 CE, following the Norman Conquest of 1066. When William the Conqueror invaded England, he brought Norman French with him — and for the next three centuries, English was transformed by massive French influence on its vocabulary, spelling, and even grammar.

Chaucer and the Canterbury Tales: The most famous work in Middle English is Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (c.1387–1400). Chaucer wrote in the London dialect, which became the prestige form of Middle English and eventually evolved into Modern English.

Key Features: Middle English still used the second-person singular "thou" (informal) versus "ye/you" (formal or plural). Verb endings like "-eth" (he speketh) and "-est" (thou art) were common. Words were spelled more phonetically, and the "great vowel shift" had not yet occurred.

The Great Vowel Shift: Between 1400 and 1700, English vowels underwent a dramatic change in pronunciation known as the Great Vowel Shift. This is why Middle English spellings look strange to modern readers — the words were once pronounced much as they were spelled.

How to Use the Middle English Translator

Four simple steps to translate into Chaucer's tongue

1

Enter text

Type or paste modern English into the left box. Use the keyboard to insert authentic Middle English words directly.

2

Translate

Click "Translate to Middle English" to convert your text into Chaucer's tongue.

3

Listen

Click "Speak Translation" to hear the text read aloud via the Web Speech API.

4

Copy or download

Save your translation for creative writing, school projects, or historical roleplay.

Note: This tool provides an educational approximation of Middle English based on documented vocabulary and grammar from the period. It is designed for learning, creative writing, and cultural appreciation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Middle English was spoken in England from approximately 1100 to 1500 CE, following the Norman Conquest. It is most famously associated with Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales. Middle English is significantly different from Modern English in spelling, vocabulary, and grammar, yet more recognizable than Old English.

The voice feature uses the Web Speech API built into modern browsers including Chrome, Edge, Safari, and Firefox. No downloads or plugins needed. It uses an English-language voice to read back the Middle English translation.

Old English (spoken before 1100 CE) is almost entirely incomprehensible to modern English speakers. Middle English, while archaic, contains many recognizable words and grammatical structures. It was heavily influenced by Norman French after the 1066 conquest.

Yes — this Middle English translator is completely free with no sign-up, no account, and no paywalls. Unlimited use.

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