Date: 2009-10-20 12:37 am (UTC)
Hmm. My favorite OE resource is the magic sheet (http://faculty.virginia.edu/OldEnglish/courses/handouts/magic.html), which is all the endings condensed into a nice one-page color-coded table. You can also read scans of the Bosworth-Toller (http://beowulf.engl.uky.edu/~kiernan/BT/Bosworth-Toller.htm) dictionary.

For more of the language-learning stuff, I really like The Electronic Introduction to Old English (http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/resources/IOE/), and its associated exercises (http://faculty.virginia.edu/OldEnglish/OEA/). They've also got a nice set of texts (http://www.iath.virginia.edu:8090/OEAerobics/index.html), the kind where clicking on any word gives you its case, number, etc etc.

(Actually, my favorite favorite resource is a copy of Sweet's Primer I found in a used bookstore, but that's kind of on the hardcore side. I also really like the Cambridge Old English Reader, and the Klaeber edition of Beowulf, which is the standard scholarly edition and has nice things like a glossary listing every word and what forms it appears in on which lines. And Teach Yourself Old English, which comes with CDs and is therefore awesome. If you were looking for books.)
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