The first Teutoniclanguage to be reduced to writing was the Moeso-Gothic.
2
Elizabeth Elstob, who studied Teutoniclanguages, was one of the founders of women's education.
3
It appears with the generic meaning of ''serpent'' in the older forms of many Teutoniclanguages, cf.
4
There, too, was made the first translation of the Gospels into one of the Teutoniclanguages, namely, the Gothic.
5
What took place may be illustrated by reference to the fate of the Teutoniclanguages in Gaul, Italy, and Spain.
6
These have immensely increased the expressiveness of English, while giving it a position midway between the very different Romance and Teutoniclanguages.