Ge-rím

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

According to the Old English Dictionary:

es;

ge-rím
n. A number, computation, calendar, diary; nŭmĕrus, compŭtātio, ephāmĕris = έφημερίs :-- Ðæs næs ná gerím cujus non ĕrat nŭmĕrus, Ps. Spl. 104, 32. Feówer and twentig wintra gerímes twenty four winters in number, Chr. 1065; Erl. 196, 26, 40; Edw. 7, 21: Cd. 224; Th. 296, 15; Sat. 502. Ofer gerím sŭper nŭmĕrum, Ps. Spl. 39, 8: 38, 6. Ic ne mug gerím witan heardra heteþonca I cannot know the number of cruel enmities, Exon. 70 a; Th. 261, 13; Jul. 314: Hy. 3, 17; Hy. Grn. ii. 281, 17. Gerím ephēmĕrĭdes, nŭmĕrus quotĭdiānus, Ælfc. Gl. 82; Som. 73, 51; Wrt. Voc. 47, 55. On getal gerímes by reckoning of numbers, Salm. Kmbl. 184, 7. On geríme by number, 192, 10. DER. dógor-gerím, geár-, heáfod-, niht-, þúsend-, un-, winter-. ge-rim
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