ge-rídan
- verb [ strong ]
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Ðá he gerád to Ecgbryhtes stáne
then he rode to Brixton,
- Chr. 878; Erl. 80, 8.
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Se ðe næs gerád
he who rode to the ness,
- Beo. Th. 5789; B. 2898.
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Ðá gerád he ða burg æt Tameworþige
then he rode and took the town at Tamworth,
- Chr. 922; Erl. 108, 24: 901; Erl. 96, 26.
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Se here geridon Wesseaxna lond and gesǽton micel ðæs folces ofer sǽ adrǽfdon and ðæs óðres ðone mǽstan dǽl hie geridon
the [Danish] army rode to Wessex and occupied it; much of the folk they drove over sea and most part of the rest they got into their power,
- 878; Erl. 78, 29-32.
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He gerád eall Norþhymbra land him to gewealde
he got all Northumberland into his power,
- 948; Erl. 117, 9.
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Se cing lét gerídan ealle ða land ðe his módor áhte him to handa
the king caused all the lands that his mother owned to be brought under his own control,
- 1043; Erl. 168, 8.
Bosworth, Joseph. “ge-rídan.” 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/15705.
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