set
- noun [ neuter ]
-
Miððý tó sete eode sunne
cum occidisset sol,
- Mk. Skt. Rush. 1, 32.
-
Gewát sunne tó sete glídan,
- Andr. Kmbl. 2498 ; An. 1250 : 2610 ; An. 1306.
-
Tó sete sígeþ,
- Menol. Fox 221; Men. 112.
- Cf. set-gang, setl.
-
Ne com se here oftor eall úte of ðǽm setum ðonne tuwwa, óðre síþe ðá hié ǽrest tó londe cómon . . . óðre síþe ðá hié of ðǽm setum faran woldon (cf. Ða Deniscan sǽeton ðǽr behindan,
- 91, 1), Chr. 894 ; Erl. 90, 19-22.
-
-Seotu bucitum (cf. hrýðra fald
bucetum,
- Wrt. Voc. i. 15, 22), Txts. 47, 339.
-
Seto
stabula,
- 99, 1903.
-
Siota,
- Wrt. Voc. i. 289, 11.
Bosworth, Joseph. “set.” 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/27538.
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