Wiktionary:Requested entries (Middle High German)

a, A

 * (suffix; e.g. in )
 * (as in ) = normalised
 * ,, , - descendants from
 * , inflected adjective form (Lexer s.v. after only has some examples with this inflected form). The word should be related to (prep., adv.). Maybe it's similar to NHG hinter (prep.), hinten (adv.), hintere (adj., pos. or comp. - grammarians have different opinions on that), hinterste (adj., sup.), where the adjective is related to a preposition or adverb and just has two and not three degrees.
 * ,, "bunting (bird)", etymon for 🇨🇬 Emberiza, genus of buntings, per
 * , - etymons of German
 * , - from Proto-Germanic
 * , - etymons of German
 * , - from Proto-Germanic
 * , - from Proto-Germanic

b, B

 * - etymon of German
 * - etymon of German "Borte"

e, E

 * - etymon of
 * = normalised /eː/ (long) as opposed to  and  (both short). Example:  (= normalised ) in "in der hende truch er einen gér." (Joseph Diemer (editor), Deutsche Gedichte des XI. und XII. Jahrhunderts, 1849, p. 208)
 * = normalised /ɛ/ (open) as opposed to  /e/ (closed)? Example:  as in "... also der bose rude te̊t." (Joseph Diemer (editor), Deutsche Gedichte des XI. und XII. Jahrhunderts, 1849, p. 214) - inflected form of / or normalised, another form of normalised , with e̊ for normalised ë /ɛ/ (open) as oppsed to e /e/ (closed)?

f, F

 * (or fuvr) as in "si wurfen fuᵛr unde witi" (Joseph Diemer (editor), Deutsche Gedichte des XI. und XII. Jahrhunderts, 1849, p. 210)
 * as in "unde fvvͦrti sie in egypto allesamt." and as in "mit ȥorn er uf fvvͦr." (Joseph Diemer (editor), Deutsche Gedichte des XI. und XII. Jahrhunderts, 1849, p. 201 & 215) - in the first vvͦ could be normalised üe, and in the second?

g, G

 * - hearing?
 * - hearing?
 * , gampilŭn - see 🇨🇬

h, H

 * — The etymon intermediate between the 🇨🇬, on the one hand, and the Czech and German  on the other; as far as I can tell, they all mean “hook”. The page already has Dutch, German, and Swedish entries, hence the blue link.
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬

i, I

 * - etymon of
 * - with inflection
 * Alternative forms:, . E.g. küniginne, küneginne, künigin, künegin, künigīn, kunegīn (from künic, künec = king, NHG König) = queen, NHG Königin.
 * (Related question: In earlier NHG some people used -in with plural -inen and not -in or -inn with plural -innen. Could -in with pl. -inen have a long vowel just like MHG -īn instead of being an ungood spelling?)

l, L

 * - etymon for the English word
 * - etymon of German
 * - etymon of German

o, O

 * (as in ), = normalised
 * (as in ) = normalised ou

r, R

 * (needs MHG) - rice?
 * = NHG Reis, NE rice; = NHG Reis, Zweig. There might also be a, ,.
 * , - fish trap?

s, S

 * - etymon of German
 * - etymon of German
 * - slaughter
 * - see 🇨🇬
 * , - see 🇨🇬

t, T

 * , - throne?

u, U

 * / (as in /) and also (as in ) = normalised uo
 * — cognate with 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬

v, V

 * / - reconcile?
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬

w, W
BTW: The Latin text contains oracionis and preposicio (as well as coniunctio) - are these Middle Latin spellings for orationis, praepositio? I'd guess with such spellings the Latin alternative forms section could become much longer similar to e.g. High German (e.g. with at least 4 obsolete forms) and Low German (because of the many different dialects and different ways of spelling). Possible alternative forms for praepositio could have: (a) æ, e or special e characters with an accent or the like instead of ae and (b) either t or c in the ending -tio (NHG and NE -tion, but ME often -cion). -80.133.103.100 21:31, 20 January 2017 (UTC)
 * / = normalised wo
 * - etymon of German
 * - southern German form of, means 1. word, 2. verb
 * Around 1400 in southern German glossing a Latin grammar of Donatus there are: nam (nomen, noun), wart (verbum, verb), zuewart (adverbium, adverb), tailnemung (participium, participle), vorseczung (praepositio, praeposition), unterwerfung (interjectio, interjection). According to www-01.sil.org/iso639-3/documentation.asp?id=gmh and www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-2/php/code_list.php gmh stands for German from ca. 1050-1500. So this would be MHG, even though some linguists think that MHG ended ca. 1350.
 * - etymon of 🇨🇬

z, Z

 * , - inflected adjective forms; nominative is given as (*?) or sometimes (*?) depending on the source