Morþ-dǽd

Kamus Anglo-Saxon Old English Bosworth & Toller - morþ-dǽd

Menurut Kamus Old English:

e;

morþ-dǽd
f. A deed which causes destruction, (a) of the body :-- Be ðǽm wiccecræftum and be liblácum and be morþdǽdum, gif man ðǽr ácweald wǽre (last passage under morþ, II, and morþ-weorc), L. Ath. i. 6; Th. i. 202, 11. (b) of the soul, deadly sin, evil deed :-- Hé gewenede swá hine sylfne tó heora synlícum þeáwum and tó márum morþdǽdum mid ðam mánfullum flocce . . . Swá férde se cniht on his fraceþum dǽdum and on morþdǽdum micclum gestrangod on orwénnysse his ágenre hǽle, Ælfc. T. Grn. 17, 18-24. Wearþ ðes þeódscype swýðe forsyngod . . . þurh morþdǽda and þurh mándǽda, Wulfst. 163, 21. [Þonne scalt þu (the body), erming, up arisen imete þine morþdeden, Fragm. Phlps. 7, 37.] morþ-dæd
Back