something really cool is listening to the first few verses of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, which was written in Middle English
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GihrWuysnrc
In English history, Old English is the language up to around ~1100 AD, Modern English is everything from Shakespeare onwards (1600s) and Middle English is the stuff in the middle
but when you first listen to it, it sounds so foreign and strange - you can still understand significant parts, so it's not a different *language*, but it is different
@lizardsquid I can't understand much of it, but it sound a lot more melodic than modern English (but I think that's just how the Canterbury Tales are set up?)
@BatElite that's partly the tales and partly the narrator - since most people were illiterate, tales like this were set up to be easy to be heard by several people at once, in perhaps a crowded room
@lizardsquid Also I've noticed that some Scandinavian words are somewhat similar to Dutch, or once I understand what they mean I can at least see what it's similar or derived from.