: 1) _earth_ (in
contrast
with heaven), _world_: acc.
Beowulf
acc.
sg.
earmran mannan, _a more wretched, more forsaken man_,
577.
earm-bēag, st. m. , _arm-ring, bracelet_: gen. pl. earm-bēaga fela searwum
gesǣled, _many arm-rings interlaced_, 2764.
earm-hrēad, st. f. , _arm-ornament_. nom. pl. earm-hrēade twā, 1195 (Grein's
conjecture, MS. earm reade).
earm-līc, adj. , _wretched, miserable_: nom. sg. sceolde his ealdor-gedāl
earmlīc wurðan, _his end should be wretched_, 808.
earm-sceapen, pret. part. as adj. (_properly, wretched by the decree of
fate_), _wretched_: nom. sg. 1352.
earn, st. m. , _eagle_: dat. sg. earne, 3027.
eatol. See atol.
eaxl, st. f. , _shoulder_: acc. sg. eaxle, 836, 973; dat. sg. on eaxle, 817,
1548; be eaxle, 1538; on eaxle ides gnornode, _the woman sobbed on the
shoulder_ (of her son, who has fallen and is being burnt), 1118; dat. pl.
sæt frēan eaxlum nēah, _sat near the shoulders of his lord_ (Bēowulf lies
lifeless upon the earth, and Wīglāf sits by his side, near his shoulder, so
as to sprinkle the face of his dead lord), 2854; hē for eaxlum gestōd
Deniga frēan, _he stood before the shoulders of the lord of the Danes_
(i. e. not directly before him, but somewhat to the side, as etiquette
demanded), 358.
eaxl-gestealla, w. m. , _he who has his position at the shoulder_ (sc. of
his lord), _trusty courtier, counsellor of a prince_: nom. sg. 1327; acc.
pl. -gesteallan, 1715.
ĒA
ēac, conj. , _also_: 97, 388, 433, etc. ; ēc, 3132.
ēacen (pret. part. of a not existing eacan, augere), adj. , _wide-spread_,
_large_: nom. pl. ēacne eardas, _broad plains_, 1622. --_great, heavy_: eald
sweord ēacen, 1664; dat. pl. ēacnum ecgum, 2141, both times of the great
sword in Grendel's habitation. --_great, mighty, powerful_: æðele and ēacen,
of Bēowulf, 198.
ēacen-cræftig, adj. , _immense_ (of riches), _enormously great_: acc. sg.
hord-ærna sum ēacen-cræftig, _that enormous treasure-house_, 2281; nom. sg.
þæt yrfe ēacen-cræftig, iūmonna gold, 3052.
ēadig, adj. , _blessed with possessions, rich, happy by reason of property_:
nom. sg. wes, þenden þū lifige, æðeling ēadig, _be, as long as thou livest,
a prince blessed with riches_, 1226; ēadig mon, 2471. --Comp. sige-, sigor-,
tīr-ēadig.
ēadig-līce, adv. , _in abundance, in joyous plenty_: drēamum lifdon
ēadiglīce, _lived in rejoicing and plenty_, 100.
ēaðe, ēðe, ȳðe, adj. , _easy, pleasant_: nom. pl. gode þancedon þæs þe him
ȳð-lāde ēaðe wurdon, _thanked God that the sea-ways_ (the navigation) _had
become easy to them_, 228; ne wæs þæt ēðe sīð, _no pleasant way_, 2587; næs
þæt ȳðe cēap, _no easy purchase_, 2416; nō þæt ȳðe byð tō beflēonne, _not
easy_ (as milder expression for _in no way, not at all_), 1003.
ēaðe, ȳðe, adv. , _easily_. ēaðe, 478, 2292, 2765.
ēað-fynde, adj. , _easy to find_: nom. sg. 138.
ēage, w. n. , _eye_: dat. pl. him of ēagum stōd lēoht unfǣger, _out of his
eyes came a terrible gleam_, 727; þæt ic . . . ēagum starige, _see with eyes,
behold_, 1782; similarly, 1936; gen. pl. ēagena bearhtm, 1767.
ēagor-strēam, st. m. , _sea-stream sea_: acc. sg. 513.
ēa-land, st. n. , _land surrounded by water_ (of the land of the Gēatas):
acc. sg. ēa-lond, 2335; _island_.
ēam, st. m. , _uncle, mothers brother_: nom. sg. 882.
ēastan, adv. , _from the east_, 569.
ēawan, w. v. , _to disclose, to show, to prove_: pres. sg. III. ēaweð . . .
uncūðne nīð, _shows evil enmity_, 276. See ēowan, ȳwan.
ge-ēawan, _to show, to offer_: pret. part. him wæs . . . wunden gold ēstum
ge-ēawed, _was graciously presented_, 1195.
EO
ēode. See gangan.
eodor, st. m. , _fence, hedge, railing_. Among the old Germans, an estate
was separated by a fence from the property of others. Inside of this fence
the laws of peace and protection held good, as well as in the house itself.
Hence eodor is sometimes used instead of _house_: acc. pl. heht eahta
mēaras on flet tēon, in under eoderas, _gave orders to lead eight steeds
into the hall, into the house_, 1038. --2) figuratively, _lord, prince_, as
protector: nom. sg. eodor, 428, 1045; eodur, 664.
eofoð, st. n. , _strength_: acc. pl. eofoðo, 2535. See eafoð.
eofer, st. m. : 1) _boar_, here of the metal boar-image upon the helmet:
nom. sg. eofer īrenheard, 1113. --2) figuratively, _bold hero, brave
fighter_ (O. N. iöfur): nom. pl. þonne . . . eoferas cnysedan, _when the
heroes rushed upon each other_, 1329, where eoferas and fēðan stand in the
same relation to each other as cnysedan and hniton.
eofor-līc, st. n. _boar-image_ (on the helmet): nom. pl. eofor-līc scionon,
303.
eofor-sprēot, st. m. , _boar-spear_: dat. pl. mid eofer-sprēotum
hēoro-hōcyhtum, _with hunting-spears which were provided with sharp hooks_,
1438.
eoguð, ioguð. See geogoð.
eolet, st. m. n. , _sea_(? ): gen. sg. eoletes, 224.
eorclan-stān, st. m. , _precious stone_: acc. pl. -stānas, 1209.
eorð-cyning, st. m. , _king of the land_: gen. sg. eorð-cyninges (Finn),
1156.
eorð-draca, w. m. , _earth-drake, dragon that lives in the earth_: nom. sg.
2713, 2826.
eorðe, w. f.
: 1) _earth_ (in contrast with heaven), _world_: acc. sg.
ælmihtiga eorðan worhte, 92; wīde geond eorðan, _far over the earth,
through the wide world_, 266; dat. sg. ofer eorðan, 248, 803; on eorðan,
1823, 2856, 3139; gen. sg. eorðan, 753. --2) _earth, ground_: acc. sg. hē
eorðan gefēoll, _fell to the ground_, 2835; forlēton eorla gestrēon eorðan
healdan, _let the earth hold the nobles' treasure_, 3168; dat. sg. þæt hit
on eorðan læg, 1533; under eorðan, 2416; gen. sg. wið eorðan fæðm (_in the
bosom of the earth_), 3050.
eorð-reced, st. n. , _hall in the earth, rock-hall_: acc. sg. 2720.
eorð-scræf, st. n. , _earth-cavern, cave_: dat. sg. eorð-[scræfe], 2233;
gen. pl. eorð-scræfe, 3047.
eorð-sele, st. m. , _hall in the earth, cave_: acc. sg. eorð-sele, 2411; dat
sg. of eorðsele, 2516.
eorð-weall, st. m. , _earth-wall_: acc. sg. (Ongenþēow) bēah eft under
eorðweall, _fled again under the earth-wall_ (into his fortified camp),
2958; þā mē wæs . . . sīð ālȳfed inn under eorðweall, _then the way in,
under the earth-wall was opened to me_ (into the dragon's cave), 3091.
eorð-weard, st. m. , _land-property, estate_: acc. sg. 2335.
eorl, st. m. , _noble born man, a man of the high nobility_: nom. sg. 762,
796, 1229, etc. ; acc. sg. eorl, 573, 628, 2696; gen. sg. eorles, 690, 983,
1758, etc. ; acc. pl. eorlas, 2817; dat. pl. eorlum, 770, 1282, 1650, etc. ;
gen. pl. eorla, 248, 357, 369, etc. --Since the king himself is from the
stock of the eorlas, he is also called eorl, 6, 2952.
eorl-gestrēon, st. n. , _wealth of the nobles_: gen. pl. eorl-gestrēona . . .
hardfyrdne dǣl, 2245.
eorl-gewǣde, st. n. , _knightly dress, armor_: dat. pl. -gewǣdum, 1443.
eorlīc (i. e. eorl-līc), adj. , _what it becomes a noble born man to do,
chivalrous_: acc. sg. eorlīc ellen, 638.
eorl-scipe, st. m. , _condition of being noble born, chivalrous nature,
nobility_: acc. sg. eorl-scipe, 1728, 3175; eorl-scipe efnan, _to do
chivalrous deeds_, 2134, 2536, 2623, 3008.
eorl-weorod, st. n. , _followers of nobles_: nom. sg. 2894.
eormen-cyn, st. n. , _very extensive race, mankind_: gen. sg. eormen-cynnes,
1958.
eormen-grund, st. m. , _immensely wide plains, the whole broad earth_: acc.
sg. ofer eormen-grund, 860.
eormen-lāf, st. f. , _enormous legacy_: acc. sg. eormen-lāfe æðelan cynnes
(_the treasures of the dragon's cave_) 2235.
eorre, adj. , _angry, enraged_: gen. sg. eorres, 1448.
eoton, st. m. : 1) _giant_: nom. sg. eoten (Grendel), 762; dat. sg.
uninflected, eoton (Grendel), 669; nom. pl. eotenas, 112. --2) Eotens,
subjects of Finn, the N. Frisians: 1073, 1089, 1142; dat. pl. 1146. See
List of Names, p. 114.
eotonisc, adj. , _gigantic, coming from giants_: acc. sg. eald sweord
eotenisc (eotonisc), 1559, 2980, (etonisc, MS. ) 2617.
ĒO
ēored-geatwe, st. f. pl. , _warlike adornments_: acc. pl. , 2867.
ēowan, w. v. , _to show, to be seen_: pres. sg. III. ne gesacu ōhwǣr,
ecghete ēoweð, _nowhere shows itself strife, sword-hate_, 1739. See ēawan,
ȳwan.
ēower: 1) gen. pl. pers. pron. , vestrum: ēower sum, _that one of you_
(namely, Bēowulf), 248; fǣhðe ēower lēode, _the enmity of the people of
you_ (of your people), 597; nis þæt ēower sīð . . . nefne mīn ānes, 2533. --2)
poss. pron. , _your_, 251, 257, 294, etc.
F
ge-fandian, -fondian, w. v. , _to try, to search for, to find out, to
experience_: w. gen. pret. part. þæt hæfde gumena sum goldes gefandod,
_that a man had discovered the gold_, 2302; þonne se ān hafað þurh deāðes
nȳd dǣda gefondad, _now the one_ (Herebeald) _has with death's pang
experienced the deeds_ (the unhappy bow-shot of Hæðcyn), 2455.
fara, w. m. , _farer, traveller_: in comp. mere-fara.
faran, st. v. , _to move from one place to another, to go, to wander_: inf.
tō hām faran, _to go home_, 124; lēton on geflīt faran fealwe mēaras, _let
the fallow horses go in emulation_, 865; cwōm faran flotherge on Frēsna
land, _had come to Friesland with a fleet_, 2916; cōm lēoda dugoðe on lāst
faran, _came to go upon the track of the heroes of his people_, i. e. to
follow them, 2946; gerund wǣron æðelingas eft tō lēodum fūse tō farenne,
_the nobles were ready to go again to their people_, 1806; pret. sg. gegnum
fōr [þā] ofer myrcan mōr, _there had_ (Grendel's mother) _gone away over
the dark fen_, 1405; sǣgenga fōr, _the seafarer_ (the ship) _drove along_,
1909; (wyrm) mid bǣle fōr, (the dragon) _fled away with fire_, 2309; pret.
pl. þæt . . . scawan scīrhame tō scipe fōron, _that the visitors in
glittering attire betook themselves to the ship_, 1896.
gefaran, _to proceed, to act_: inf. hū se mānsceaða under fǣrgripum gefaran
wolde, _how he would act in his sudden attacks_, 739.
ūt faran, _to go out_: w. acc. lēt of brēostum . . . word ūt faran, _let
words go out of his breast, uttered words_, 2552.
faroð, st. m. , _stream, flood of the sea, shore, strand, edge_: dat. sg. tō
brimes faroðe, 28; æfter faroðe, _with the stream_, 580; æt faroðe, 1917.
faru, st. f. , _way, passage, expedition_: in comp. ād-faru.
fācen-stæf (elementum nequitiae), st. m. , _wickedness, treachery, deceit_.
acc.
577.
earm-bēag, st. m. , _arm-ring, bracelet_: gen. pl. earm-bēaga fela searwum
gesǣled, _many arm-rings interlaced_, 2764.
earm-hrēad, st. f. , _arm-ornament_. nom. pl. earm-hrēade twā, 1195 (Grein's
conjecture, MS. earm reade).
earm-līc, adj. , _wretched, miserable_: nom. sg. sceolde his ealdor-gedāl
earmlīc wurðan, _his end should be wretched_, 808.
earm-sceapen, pret. part. as adj. (_properly, wretched by the decree of
fate_), _wretched_: nom. sg. 1352.
earn, st. m. , _eagle_: dat. sg. earne, 3027.
eatol. See atol.
eaxl, st. f. , _shoulder_: acc. sg. eaxle, 836, 973; dat. sg. on eaxle, 817,
1548; be eaxle, 1538; on eaxle ides gnornode, _the woman sobbed on the
shoulder_ (of her son, who has fallen and is being burnt), 1118; dat. pl.
sæt frēan eaxlum nēah, _sat near the shoulders of his lord_ (Bēowulf lies
lifeless upon the earth, and Wīglāf sits by his side, near his shoulder, so
as to sprinkle the face of his dead lord), 2854; hē for eaxlum gestōd
Deniga frēan, _he stood before the shoulders of the lord of the Danes_
(i. e. not directly before him, but somewhat to the side, as etiquette
demanded), 358.
eaxl-gestealla, w. m. , _he who has his position at the shoulder_ (sc. of
his lord), _trusty courtier, counsellor of a prince_: nom. sg. 1327; acc.
pl. -gesteallan, 1715.
ĒA
ēac, conj. , _also_: 97, 388, 433, etc. ; ēc, 3132.
ēacen (pret. part. of a not existing eacan, augere), adj. , _wide-spread_,
_large_: nom. pl. ēacne eardas, _broad plains_, 1622. --_great, heavy_: eald
sweord ēacen, 1664; dat. pl. ēacnum ecgum, 2141, both times of the great
sword in Grendel's habitation. --_great, mighty, powerful_: æðele and ēacen,
of Bēowulf, 198.
ēacen-cræftig, adj. , _immense_ (of riches), _enormously great_: acc. sg.
hord-ærna sum ēacen-cræftig, _that enormous treasure-house_, 2281; nom. sg.
þæt yrfe ēacen-cræftig, iūmonna gold, 3052.
ēadig, adj. , _blessed with possessions, rich, happy by reason of property_:
nom. sg. wes, þenden þū lifige, æðeling ēadig, _be, as long as thou livest,
a prince blessed with riches_, 1226; ēadig mon, 2471. --Comp. sige-, sigor-,
tīr-ēadig.
ēadig-līce, adv. , _in abundance, in joyous plenty_: drēamum lifdon
ēadiglīce, _lived in rejoicing and plenty_, 100.
ēaðe, ēðe, ȳðe, adj. , _easy, pleasant_: nom. pl. gode þancedon þæs þe him
ȳð-lāde ēaðe wurdon, _thanked God that the sea-ways_ (the navigation) _had
become easy to them_, 228; ne wæs þæt ēðe sīð, _no pleasant way_, 2587; næs
þæt ȳðe cēap, _no easy purchase_, 2416; nō þæt ȳðe byð tō beflēonne, _not
easy_ (as milder expression for _in no way, not at all_), 1003.
ēaðe, ȳðe, adv. , _easily_. ēaðe, 478, 2292, 2765.
ēað-fynde, adj. , _easy to find_: nom. sg. 138.
ēage, w. n. , _eye_: dat. pl. him of ēagum stōd lēoht unfǣger, _out of his
eyes came a terrible gleam_, 727; þæt ic . . . ēagum starige, _see with eyes,
behold_, 1782; similarly, 1936; gen. pl. ēagena bearhtm, 1767.
ēagor-strēam, st. m. , _sea-stream sea_: acc. sg. 513.
ēa-land, st. n. , _land surrounded by water_ (of the land of the Gēatas):
acc. sg. ēa-lond, 2335; _island_.
ēam, st. m. , _uncle, mothers brother_: nom. sg. 882.
ēastan, adv. , _from the east_, 569.
ēawan, w. v. , _to disclose, to show, to prove_: pres. sg. III. ēaweð . . .
uncūðne nīð, _shows evil enmity_, 276. See ēowan, ȳwan.
ge-ēawan, _to show, to offer_: pret. part. him wæs . . . wunden gold ēstum
ge-ēawed, _was graciously presented_, 1195.
EO
ēode. See gangan.
eodor, st. m. , _fence, hedge, railing_. Among the old Germans, an estate
was separated by a fence from the property of others. Inside of this fence
the laws of peace and protection held good, as well as in the house itself.
Hence eodor is sometimes used instead of _house_: acc. pl. heht eahta
mēaras on flet tēon, in under eoderas, _gave orders to lead eight steeds
into the hall, into the house_, 1038. --2) figuratively, _lord, prince_, as
protector: nom. sg. eodor, 428, 1045; eodur, 664.
eofoð, st. n. , _strength_: acc. pl. eofoðo, 2535. See eafoð.
eofer, st. m. : 1) _boar_, here of the metal boar-image upon the helmet:
nom. sg. eofer īrenheard, 1113. --2) figuratively, _bold hero, brave
fighter_ (O. N. iöfur): nom. pl. þonne . . . eoferas cnysedan, _when the
heroes rushed upon each other_, 1329, where eoferas and fēðan stand in the
same relation to each other as cnysedan and hniton.
eofor-līc, st. n. _boar-image_ (on the helmet): nom. pl. eofor-līc scionon,
303.
eofor-sprēot, st. m. , _boar-spear_: dat. pl. mid eofer-sprēotum
hēoro-hōcyhtum, _with hunting-spears which were provided with sharp hooks_,
1438.
eoguð, ioguð. See geogoð.
eolet, st. m. n. , _sea_(? ): gen. sg. eoletes, 224.
eorclan-stān, st. m. , _precious stone_: acc. pl. -stānas, 1209.
eorð-cyning, st. m. , _king of the land_: gen. sg. eorð-cyninges (Finn),
1156.
eorð-draca, w. m. , _earth-drake, dragon that lives in the earth_: nom. sg.
2713, 2826.
eorðe, w. f.
: 1) _earth_ (in contrast with heaven), _world_: acc. sg.
ælmihtiga eorðan worhte, 92; wīde geond eorðan, _far over the earth,
through the wide world_, 266; dat. sg. ofer eorðan, 248, 803; on eorðan,
1823, 2856, 3139; gen. sg. eorðan, 753. --2) _earth, ground_: acc. sg. hē
eorðan gefēoll, _fell to the ground_, 2835; forlēton eorla gestrēon eorðan
healdan, _let the earth hold the nobles' treasure_, 3168; dat. sg. þæt hit
on eorðan læg, 1533; under eorðan, 2416; gen. sg. wið eorðan fæðm (_in the
bosom of the earth_), 3050.
eorð-reced, st. n. , _hall in the earth, rock-hall_: acc. sg. 2720.
eorð-scræf, st. n. , _earth-cavern, cave_: dat. sg. eorð-[scræfe], 2233;
gen. pl. eorð-scræfe, 3047.
eorð-sele, st. m. , _hall in the earth, cave_: acc. sg. eorð-sele, 2411; dat
sg. of eorðsele, 2516.
eorð-weall, st. m. , _earth-wall_: acc. sg. (Ongenþēow) bēah eft under
eorðweall, _fled again under the earth-wall_ (into his fortified camp),
2958; þā mē wæs . . . sīð ālȳfed inn under eorðweall, _then the way in,
under the earth-wall was opened to me_ (into the dragon's cave), 3091.
eorð-weard, st. m. , _land-property, estate_: acc. sg. 2335.
eorl, st. m. , _noble born man, a man of the high nobility_: nom. sg. 762,
796, 1229, etc. ; acc. sg. eorl, 573, 628, 2696; gen. sg. eorles, 690, 983,
1758, etc. ; acc. pl. eorlas, 2817; dat. pl. eorlum, 770, 1282, 1650, etc. ;
gen. pl. eorla, 248, 357, 369, etc. --Since the king himself is from the
stock of the eorlas, he is also called eorl, 6, 2952.
eorl-gestrēon, st. n. , _wealth of the nobles_: gen. pl. eorl-gestrēona . . .
hardfyrdne dǣl, 2245.
eorl-gewǣde, st. n. , _knightly dress, armor_: dat. pl. -gewǣdum, 1443.
eorlīc (i. e. eorl-līc), adj. , _what it becomes a noble born man to do,
chivalrous_: acc. sg. eorlīc ellen, 638.
eorl-scipe, st. m. , _condition of being noble born, chivalrous nature,
nobility_: acc. sg. eorl-scipe, 1728, 3175; eorl-scipe efnan, _to do
chivalrous deeds_, 2134, 2536, 2623, 3008.
eorl-weorod, st. n. , _followers of nobles_: nom. sg. 2894.
eormen-cyn, st. n. , _very extensive race, mankind_: gen. sg. eormen-cynnes,
1958.
eormen-grund, st. m. , _immensely wide plains, the whole broad earth_: acc.
sg. ofer eormen-grund, 860.
eormen-lāf, st. f. , _enormous legacy_: acc. sg. eormen-lāfe æðelan cynnes
(_the treasures of the dragon's cave_) 2235.
eorre, adj. , _angry, enraged_: gen. sg. eorres, 1448.
eoton, st. m. : 1) _giant_: nom. sg. eoten (Grendel), 762; dat. sg.
uninflected, eoton (Grendel), 669; nom. pl. eotenas, 112. --2) Eotens,
subjects of Finn, the N. Frisians: 1073, 1089, 1142; dat. pl. 1146. See
List of Names, p. 114.
eotonisc, adj. , _gigantic, coming from giants_: acc. sg. eald sweord
eotenisc (eotonisc), 1559, 2980, (etonisc, MS. ) 2617.
ĒO
ēored-geatwe, st. f. pl. , _warlike adornments_: acc. pl. , 2867.
ēowan, w. v. , _to show, to be seen_: pres. sg. III. ne gesacu ōhwǣr,
ecghete ēoweð, _nowhere shows itself strife, sword-hate_, 1739. See ēawan,
ȳwan.
ēower: 1) gen. pl. pers. pron. , vestrum: ēower sum, _that one of you_
(namely, Bēowulf), 248; fǣhðe ēower lēode, _the enmity of the people of
you_ (of your people), 597; nis þæt ēower sīð . . . nefne mīn ānes, 2533. --2)
poss. pron. , _your_, 251, 257, 294, etc.
F
ge-fandian, -fondian, w. v. , _to try, to search for, to find out, to
experience_: w. gen. pret. part. þæt hæfde gumena sum goldes gefandod,
_that a man had discovered the gold_, 2302; þonne se ān hafað þurh deāðes
nȳd dǣda gefondad, _now the one_ (Herebeald) _has with death's pang
experienced the deeds_ (the unhappy bow-shot of Hæðcyn), 2455.
fara, w. m. , _farer, traveller_: in comp. mere-fara.
faran, st. v. , _to move from one place to another, to go, to wander_: inf.
tō hām faran, _to go home_, 124; lēton on geflīt faran fealwe mēaras, _let
the fallow horses go in emulation_, 865; cwōm faran flotherge on Frēsna
land, _had come to Friesland with a fleet_, 2916; cōm lēoda dugoðe on lāst
faran, _came to go upon the track of the heroes of his people_, i. e. to
follow them, 2946; gerund wǣron æðelingas eft tō lēodum fūse tō farenne,
_the nobles were ready to go again to their people_, 1806; pret. sg. gegnum
fōr [þā] ofer myrcan mōr, _there had_ (Grendel's mother) _gone away over
the dark fen_, 1405; sǣgenga fōr, _the seafarer_ (the ship) _drove along_,
1909; (wyrm) mid bǣle fōr, (the dragon) _fled away with fire_, 2309; pret.
pl. þæt . . . scawan scīrhame tō scipe fōron, _that the visitors in
glittering attire betook themselves to the ship_, 1896.
gefaran, _to proceed, to act_: inf. hū se mānsceaða under fǣrgripum gefaran
wolde, _how he would act in his sudden attacks_, 739.
ūt faran, _to go out_: w. acc. lēt of brēostum . . . word ūt faran, _let
words go out of his breast, uttered words_, 2552.
faroð, st. m. , _stream, flood of the sea, shore, strand, edge_: dat. sg. tō
brimes faroðe, 28; æfter faroðe, _with the stream_, 580; æt faroðe, 1917.
faru, st. f. , _way, passage, expedition_: in comp. ād-faru.
fācen-stæf (elementum nequitiae), st. m. , _wickedness, treachery, deceit_.
acc.
