Snǽd

Dizionario Anglo-Sassone Inglese Antico di Bosworth & Toller - snǽd

Secondo il Dizionario dell'Inglese Antico:

es;

snǽd
m. 'A piece of land within defined limits, but without enclosures, a limited circumscribed woodland or pasturage,' Leo, Anglo-Saxon Names of Places, pp. 68-9. Or (?) a clearing in a wood. Cf. snǽdan, II:--Ic hire léte tó ðæt ceorla gráf tósundran . . . and se alhmunding snǽd hére intó preosda byrig, Cod. Dip. Kmbl. ii. 100, 16. Be ðam gráue ðæt hit cymþ intó ðam snǽde; and of ðam snǽde, iii. 399, 34. Ðet firhde bituihu longanleág and ðem suðtúne and ða snádas illuc pertinentia, i. 261, 10. Tó Óswaldingtúne hiérþ holenhyrst . . . cyrþring-hyrst, triphyrst, and insnádis(-as?) intó Óswaldingtúne, ii. 228, 4. Also snǽðfeld occurs iii. 399, 20:--On ðone lytlan snǽðfeld; and snádhyrst, i. 273, 6. snæd
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