Hnot
Bosworth & Toller Anglo-Saxon Old English Dictionary - hnot
According to the Old English Dictionary:
- hnot
- Add: I. of animals, without horns, that has lost a horn :-- Hnot mutilun, hnottum mutilatis, Wrt. Voc. ii. 56, 16, 17. [Perhaps hnoc (q. hnot, and taken here.] II. of trees, cropped, pollarded :-- Tō dām hnottan stocce (cf. Usque la notte stokke, iii. 374, 6), C. D. v. 303, 3. On þone hnottan þom, 289, l. III. cleared of bushes (?) :-- On hnottan ford, C. D. iii. 25, 23. On hnottan mæræ nordæweardna, v. 112, 27. [v. N. E. D. not. D. D. not (of a field) smooth, well-tilled.] hnot