Ge-hende

Bosworth & Toller Anglo-Saxon Old English Dictionary - ge-hende

According to the Old English Dictionary:

ge-hende
adj. Add; I. local :-- Ne mæg þǣr ǣni man gedyrstig wesan dēman gehende nullus ibi confidit judice praesens, Dōm. L. 170. Sume naman syndon . . . stōwlice . . . propinquus gehende, Ælfc. Gr. Z. 14, 20. Gehendes proxime, Germ. 388, 54. Fērde hē tō gehendum burgum, Ælfc. T. Grn. 16, 32. Land dæ him gehændre beó and behēfe terra quae eis vicinior sit vel utilior, Cht. Th. 493, 20. Him tō geneálǣhton his discipuli ꝥ hī gehendran wǣron līchamlīce, þā þe mid mōde his bebodum geneálǣhton, Hml. Th. i. 548, 26. II. temporal :-- Ūre hǣl is gehendre þonne wē gelȳfdon, Hml. Th. i. 602, 1, 21. III. of order or degree :-- Cherubim sind āfyllede mid gewitte swā miccle swīdor swā hī gehendran beód heora Scyppende durh wurdscipe heora geearnunga, Hml, Th. i. 344, 4. IV. of association, intimacy, &c. Þa-long; him hē dyde gehende ea sibi fecit socia, Scint. 104, 5. UNCERTAIN heora stefn sȳ Gode gehendre (vicinior) þonne him syluum, Nap. 30. [O. H. Ger. ge-henti.] ge-hende
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