lǽce-finger
- noun [ masculine ]
-
Þuma
pollex,
scytelfinger
index,
middelfinger
medius,
lǽcefinger
medicus,
eárefinger
auricularius,
- Wrt. Voc. 71, 30-34 .
-
At p. 44,7-8 the names are different:--
Goldfinger
medicus vel annularis,
lǽcefinger
auricularis,
- Ælfc. Gl. 73 ;
- Som. 71, 22.
-
Sing on ðíne lǽce-finger paternoster,
- Lchdm. i. 394, 2.
-
In Prompt. Parv. P. 291 note the reason for the name is given differently.
'The fourth finger was called the leech finger, from the pulsation therein found,
and supposed to be in more direct communication with the heart, as in the tract attributed
to Joh. de Garlandiâ ... it is said
'Stat medics
[medylle fyngure]
media, medicus
[leche fyngure]
jam convenit
[accordyt]
egro.'
See too in the same writer's Dictionarius,- Wrt. Voc. p. 121, 35
Bosworth, Joseph. “lǽce-finger.” 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/20918.
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