consul
- noun [ masculine ]
-
Him ða Rómáne æfter ðǽm [cyningum] látteówas gesetton, ðe hí consulas héton, ðæt hiora ríce heólde án geár an man
after them [the kings] the Romans appointed over themselves leaders, whom they called consuls, that one man of them should hold power one year
- Ors. 2, 2 ;
- Bos. 41, 36.
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Brutus wæs se forma consul
Brutus was the first consul
- Ors. 2, 3 ;
- Bos. 41, 40, 41 ;
- 2, 4 ;
- Bos. 42, 27.
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Án consul forsóc ðone MS. þæne triumphan
one consul [Fabius] declined the triumph
- 2, 4;
- Bos. 42, 43.
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Senátas cómon ongeán hyra consulas
the senators came to meet their consuls
- 2, 4 ;
- Bos. 43, 5, 20, 26.
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Under ðám twám consulum
under the two consuls
- 2, 4 ;
- Bos. 42, 33, 39: 2, 4 ;
- Bos. 43, 10, 16
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Hæfdon him consulas, ðæt we cweðaþ rǽdboran
they had consuls, that we call counsellors,
- Jud. Thw. 161, 22.
Bosworth, Joseph. “consul.” In An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online, edited by Thomas Northcote Toller, Christ Sean, and Ondřej Tichy. Prague: Faculty of Arts, Charles University, 2014. https://bosworthtoller.com/6557.
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