[In The Second Shepherd's Play the rascal Mak tries to pretend he is an important messenger from the king, in London, and he attempts to speak in a dialect suitable to one from London. The Shepherds immediately recognize him but he insists on keeping up the pretense. He uses "ich" for the pronoun "I" and and uses the verb ending -th (in goyth and doth) rather than -s as in both modern English and the Northern dialect of Middle English.]Mak is first heard off stage:
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