cwealm
- noun [ masculine ]
-
Hine se cwealm ne þeáh
death profited him not,
- Exon. 74b ;
- Th. 278, 30 ;
- Jul. 605: Cd. 79 ;
- Th. 98, 1 ;
- Gen. 1623: Elen. Kmbl. 1349 ;
- El. 676 .
-
Him cwelm gesceód
death destroyed him,
- Cd. 208 ;
- Th. 257, 36 ;
- Dan. 668 .
-
Ylda cwealm
a slaughter of men,
- Andr. Kmbl. 363 ;
- An. 182 .
-
Cwealmes wyrhta
a worker of murder, a murderer,
- Cd. 48 ;
- Th. 61, 29 ;
- Gen. 1004 .
-
Ðider sóþfæstra sáwla mótun cuman æfter cwealme
thither the souls of the just may come after death,
- Exon. 32b ;
- Th. 103, 14 ;
- Cri. 1688: Cd. 166 ;
- Th. 207, 18 ;
- Exod. 468 .
-
To wera cwealme
for the destruction of men,
- Andr. Kmbl. 3013 ;
- An. 1509 .
-
Ic honda gewemde on Caines cwealme míne
I have polluted my hands in Cain's murder,
- Cd. 52 ;
- Th. 67, 4 ;
- Gen. 1095 .
-
In Caines cynne ðone cwealm gewræc Drihten
the Lord avenged the death [of Abel] on Cain's race,
- Beo. Th. 215 ;
- B. 107: Exon. 28b ;
- Th. 87, 17 ;
- Cri. 1426: Andr. Kmbl. 2243: An. 1123 .
-
Ðú wást cwealm hátne in helle
thou knowest hot torment in hell,
- 2374 ;
- An. 1188: 562 ;
- An. 281 .
-
Þurh deáþes cwealm
through pain of death,
- Exon. 35b ;
- Th. 115, 26 ;
- Gú. 195: Cd. 224; Th. 296, 9 ;
- Sat. 499 .
-
Mid morþes cwealme
with pain of death,
- 35 ;
- Th. 47, 9 ;
- Gen. 758 .
-
Cwealma mǽst
the greatest of torments, hell,
- Exon. 31b ;
- Th. 99, 20 ;
- Cri. 1627 .
-
Micel cwealm wearþ ðæs folces
the mortality of the people was great,
- Homl. Th. ii. 122, 18.
-
Cwealm pestilentia vel contagium vel
lues,
- Ælfc. Gl. 9 ;
- Som. 57, 8;
- Wrt. Voc. 19, 18.
-
Ðæt us cwealm on ne becume
ne forte occidat nos pestis,
- Ex. 5, 3.
-
To ðam swíðe awédde se cwealm ðæt hundeahtatig manna of lífe gewiton
the plague raged to that degree that eighty men departed from life,
- Homl. Th. ii. 126, 18: Exon. 89a ;
- Th. 335, 7 ;
- Gn. Ex. 30 .
-
On ðissum geáre com micel máncwealm on Brytene ígland, and on ðam cwealme forþférde Tuda biscop
in this year [A. D. 664] there was a great plague in the island of Britain, and bishop Tuda died of the plague,
- Chr. 664 ;
- Erl. 35, 19: Homl. Th. ii. 124, 2.
-
Godes miltsung ðone rédan cwealm gestilde
God's mercy stilled the cruel pestilence,
ii.- 126, 22.
-
Beóþ mycele eorþan styrunga geond stówa, and cwealmas terræmotus magni erunt per loca, et pestilentiæ, Lk. Bos. 21, 11. In the following example cwealm is neuter Sume ic þurh mislíc cwealm mínum hondum slóg
some I slew by my hands through various deaths,
- Exon. 73a ;
- Th. 272, 2 ;
- Jul. 493 .
Bosworth, Joseph. “cwealm.” 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/6904.
Checked: 1