Ende

Bosworth & Toller Anglo-Saxon Old English Dictionary - ende

According to the Old English Dictionary:

es;

ENDE
m. I. an END ; fīnis, termĭnus :-- Ac nys ðonne gyt se ende sed nondum est fīnis, Mt. Bos. 24, 6. Á bútan ende ever without end, L. E. I. prm; Th. ii. 400, 28. Ðæt hí ðæs gewinnes sumne ende gedyden that they would make an end of the war, Ors. 2, 2 ; Bos. 41, 1. Ðú eart eallra þinga fruma and ende thou art the beginning and end of all things, Bt. Met. Fox 20, 549; Met. 20, 275 : Andr. Kmbl. 1112; An. 556. II. a corner, part, sort; angŭlus, pars, spĕcies :-- Ðæt sylfe wæter ðæt hí ða bán mid þwógan, gutan in ǽnne ende ðære cyricean the selfsame water that they washed the bones with, they poured into one corner of the church [in angŭlo sacrārii], Bd. 3, 11; S. 535, 33, Harold of-slóh ðǽr mycelne ende ðæs folces Harold slew there a great part of the people, Chr. 1052 ; Gib. 166, 22; Th. 319, 14, col. 1. On feówer endum ðyses middangeardes in the four parts of this world. Ors. 2, 1; Bos. 38, 21. Ofer ealle eorþan endas over all parts of the earth, Ps. Th. 18, 4. Ne hæfde wit óðer uncymran hors and óðres endes numquid non hăbuĭmus ĕquos vīliōres, vel ălias spĕcies, Bd. 3, 14; S. 540, 27. [Chauc. Wyc. ende: O. Sax. endi, m. n: Frs. eyn, eyne: O. Frs. enda, einde, eind, ein, m: Dut. einde, n: Ger. ende , n: M. H. Ger. ende , n. m: O. H. Ger. anti, enti , m. n: Goth. andeis , m : Dan. ende, m. f: Swed, ände, m: Icel. endi, endir, m: Sansk, anta, m.] DER. eást-ende. norþ-, west-, woruld-. ende,-ende
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