hǽte
- noun [ feminine ]
-
Cíle and hǽte ne geswícaþ
frigus et æstus non requiescent,
- Gen. 8, 22.
-
Ðá ðá seó hǽte com ðá forscranc hit
when the heat came then it withered away,
- Homl. Th. ii. 90, 30.
-
On ðære hǽtan ðæs dæges
in the heat of the day,
- Gen. 18, 1 : Mt. Kmbl. 20, 12.
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For sunnan hætan
on account of the heat of the sun,
- Herb. 100, 8; Lchdm. i. 214, 24 : 114, 1; Lchdm. i. 226,
23.
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Wið eágena hǽtan
for heat of the eyes,
- Lchdm. i. 352, 5.
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Eówre gléda náne hǽtan mínum líchaman ne gedóþ
your embers cause no heat to my body,
- Homl. Th. i. 430, 12.
-
Ðæt hellíce fýr hæfþ unásecgendlíce hǽtan and nán leóht
the fire of hell has heat unspeakable, but no light,
- 532, 2.
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Ongan mid monegum hǽtum geswenced beón
multis cæpit æstibus affici,
- Bd. 2, 12; S. 513, 31.
-
Wið wunda hátum
for inflammations of wounds,
- Herb. 2, 16; Lchdm. i. 84, 20.
Bosworth, Joseph. “hǽte.” 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/17966.
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