ór (original) (raw)
beginning, origin
- Ór ł fruma
initium,
Mk. Skt. Lind. 13, 8. - Dæges ór onwóc geleáfan
the day-spring of belief awoke, Apstls.
Kmbl. 130; Ap. 65. - Næs him fruma ǽfre ór geworden,
Cd. Th. l, 11; Gen. 6. - Ðǽr wæs yfles ór,
Andr. Kmbl. 2763; An. 1384. - On ðæm wæs ór writen fyrngewinnes,
Beo. Th. 3381 ; B. 1688. - Or and ende,
Exon. Th. 492, 6; Rü. 81, 10. - Cwealmes on óre at the beginning of the destruction, Cd. Th. 153, 32 ;
Gen.
- Gif ðú his ne meaht ór áreccan
if you cannot tell even the beginning of your dream,
224, 9 ; Dan. 133. - Secgan ór and ende
ło tell from first to last.
Andr. Kmbl. 1297 ; An. 649. - Ic ðé yfla gehwylces ór gecýðe óþ ende forþ,
Exon. Th. 263, 21; Jul. 353. - Sué hé wundra gihuaes ór ástelidæ (cf. ord onstealde, Bd. 4, 24; S. 597, 21)
quomodo ille omnium miraculorum auctor exstitit,
Txts. 149, 4. - Orleges ór onstellan, Beo. Th. 4806; B. 2407: Exon. Th. 386, 10;
Rü.
4, 59. - Ne can ic Abeles ór ne fóre hleómǽges síð
I know not Abel's life from its beginning or its later course,
Cd. Th. 61, 33; Gen. 1006.
front, van
- Wæs on óre heard handplega,
198, 22; Exod. 326: Beo. Th. 2087; B. 1041. - Heriges on óre,
Andr. Kmbl. 2213 ; An. 1108. - Cf. ord.
Bosworth, Joseph. “ór.” In An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online, edited by Thomas Northcote Toller, Christ Sean, and Ondřej Tichy. Prague: Faculty of Arts, Charles University, 2014. https://bosworthtoller.com/24882.
Checked: 0
