frum-sceaft
- noun [ feminine ]
-
Sing me frumsceaft
canta princĭpium creatūrārum,
- Bd. 4, 24 ;
- S. 597, 16.
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Moyses awrát ǽrest be frumsceafte
Moses wrote first of the creation,
- Homl. Th. ii. 198, 15.
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Frumsceaft
genesis,
- Jn. Skt. p. 1, 12.
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Gé mágon hwæt-hwego ongitan be eówrum frumsceafte, ðæt is God
ye can in some measure understand concerning your origin, that is God,
- Bt. 26, 1 ;
- Fox 90, 4.
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Æt frumsceafte
at the beginning
,- Exon. 99 a ;
- Th. 371, 21 ;
- Seel. 79: Beo. Th. 89 ;
- 6. 45: Andr. Kmbl. 1593 ;
- An. 798.
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He cúðe frumsceaft fira feorran reccan
he could relate the origin of men from [times] remote,
- Beo. Th. 182 ;
- B. 91.
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Fýr clymmaþ on gecyndo, cunnaþ hwænne móte on his frumsceaft, eft to his éþle
fire climbeth in its nature, strives when it can towards its origin, back to its home,
- Salm. Kmbl. 831 ;
- Sal. 415.
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He forlǽt ǽrest lífes frumsceaft
he first forsakes his original state of life,
- Bt. Met. Fox 17, 48 ;
- Met. 17, 24.
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Hí héredon lífes Ágend, Fæder frumsceafta
they praised the Lord of life, the Father of all created beings,
- Exon. 14 b ;
- Th. 29, 33 ;
- Cri. 472: 84 a ;
- Th. 317, 15 ;
- Mód. 66: Cd. 156 ;
- Th. 195, 9 ;
- Exod. 274.
Bosworth, Joseph. “frum-sceaft.” 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/12549.
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