leód
- noun [ feminine ]
-
Hit wæs hwílum on Engla lagum ðæt leód and lagu fór be geþincþum
at one time it was in the laws of the English, that the people and the law went according to ranks,
- L. R. 1 ;
- Th. i. 190, 11 .
-
Ðæt leód and lagu trumlíce stande,
- Wulfst. 74, 8 .
-
Feówer folccyningas, leóde rǽswan,
- Cd. 95 ;
- Th. 125, 6 ;
- Gen. 2075 .
-
Ða fǽhþe eówer leóde
the hostility of your people,
- Beo. Th. 1197 ;
- B. 596 .
-
Tó fela Deniga leóde,
- 1396 ;
- B. 696 :
- 1202 ;
- B. 599 .
-
Se wæs Cantwara leóde
oriundus de gente Cantuariorum,
- Bd. 3, 14 ;
- S. 539, 27 .
-
Moyses leóde
from the Israelites,
- Cd. 149 ;
- Th. 187, 16 ;
- Exod. 152 .
-
Wæs his gewuna ðæt hé his ágene leóde Norþanhymbra mǽgþe sóhte
solebat suam, id est, Nordanhymbrorum provinciam revisere,
- Bd. 3, 23 ;
- S. 554, 6 .
-
Hé wæs ealle ða land and leóde þurhfærende
omnia pervagatus,
- 3, 30 ;
- S. 562, 13 .
-
Úres hláfordes gerǽdnes is ðæt man cristene menn of earde ne sylle ne húru on hǽðene leóde
our lord's ordinance is, that Christian men be not sold out of the land, certainly not into a heathen country [or leóde = men, preceding word],
- L. Eth. v. 2 ;
- Th. i. 304, 16 :
- Beo. Th. 387 ;
- B. 192 .
-
Ðone Denisca leóda lufiaþ swýðost
him [Thor] the Scandinavian peoples love most,
- Wulfst. 106, 23 .
-
Beneuentius and Sepontanus hátton ða twá leóde
Benevento and Sepontus were the two places called,
- Blickl. HomI. 201, 22 .
-
Ealle him leóda lácum cwemaþ
all nations shall make offerings to please him,
- Ps. Th. 71, 10 .
Bosworth, Joseph. “leód.” 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/21394.
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