Bosworth Toller's

Anglo-Saxon

Dictionary online

BOTM

  • noun [ masculine ]
Dictionary links
Grammar
BOTM, es; m.
Wright's OE grammar
§106; §219; §282; §298; §340; §563;
A BOTTOM; fundus
Show examples
  • Scipes botm

    a ship's bottom, the keel;

    carina,
      Ælfc. Gl. 83; Som. 73, 64; Wrt. Voc. 48, 3: 103; Som. 77, 112; Wrt. Voc. 56, 32.
  • Satan on botme [ðære helle] stód

    Satan stood at the bottom [of hell],

      Cd. 229; Th. 310, 5; Sat. 721: 18 ; Th. 21, 27; Gen. 330: 19 ; Th. 23, 18; Gen. 361.
  • Heó to [ðæs fennes] botme com

    she came to the bottom [of the fen],

      Beo. Th. 3017; B. 1506.
Etymology
[Chauc. botome: Wyc. botme: O. Sax. bodom, m: Frs. boyem, c: O. Frs. boden, m: Dut. bódem, m: Ger. M. H. Ger. bodem, boden, m: O. H. Ger. bodam, m: Dan. bund, c: Swed. botten, m: Icel. botn, m: Lat. fundus, m: Grk. πυθμήν, m: Ir. bonn, m: Gael. bonn, buinn, m: Sansk. budhna, m. the bottom, from the root budh to fathom a depth, penetrate to the bottom.]
Derived forms
DER. byden-botm, tunne-.
Linked entries
v.  bodan.
Full form

Word-wheel

  • BOTM, n.