Although other forms are topologically possible, these are the only attested forms found so far.
The following table gives the attested forms of the personal pronouns, omitting those that cannot be determined.
To maintain a clear distinction between attested and reconstructed forms, comparative linguists prefix an asterisk to any form that is not found in surviving texts.
The surviving word forms which are the evidence for such a language are called attested forms.
The names are given in their attested forms followed by the reconstructed Gothic forms and their meanings.
Other attested forms of the adjective are Riparenses and Riparienses.
An early attested form of the surname when originating from someone who lived near a sign of a bell is: John "atte Belle", in 1332.
The other dialects must have preceded their attested forms but the relationship of the precedents to Mycenaean remains to be discovered.
I-qo is the earliest attested form of the word, and was found written in Linear B syllabic script.
Most of them derive from the earliest attested form, the Estonian Tarbatu.