hám
- noun [ masculine ]
- adverb
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Se hám is gefylled mid heofonlícum gástum
that abode [heaven] is filled with heavenly spirits,
- Blickl. Homl. 25, 33: 9, 7.
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Ðes atola hám
this horrid abode [hell],
- Cd. 215; Th. 270, 26 ; Sat. 96.
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Tó cyniges háme
ad mansionem regiam,
- L. R. S. 1; Th. i. 432, 7: Shrn. 187, 7, 22.
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Ðá gerád Æþelwald ðone hám æt Winburnan ... and sæt binnan ðæm hám mid ðǽm monnum ðe him tó gebugon and hæfde ealle ða geatu forworht
then Ethelwald rode and occupied the residence at Winborne and sat within with those men that had joined him, and he had blockaded all the entrances,
- Chr. 901; Erl. 96, 26-30.
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Mínre yldstan déhter ðæne hám æt Welewe and ðære gingestan ðone hám æt Welig
to my eldest daughter the vill at Wellow, and to the youngest the vill at Welig,
- Th. Chart. 488, 29-33.
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Gif cyning æt mannes hám drincæþ
if the king drink at a man's house,
- L. Eth. 3; Th. i. 4, 1: L. H. E. 15; Th. i. 32, 17: L. Alf. pol. 21;
Th. i. 76, 1.
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Hælend com tó Lazares hám
Jesus had come to the home of Lazarus,
- Blickl. Homl. 69, 21.
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Ðá Noe ongan hám staðelian
then began Noah to establish his home,
- Cd. 75; Th. 94, 4; Gen. 556.
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In hús fadores mínes hámas meniga sint
in domo patris mei mansions multæ sunt,
- Jn. Skt. Lind. 14, 2: 23.
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Nǽron ðá welige hámas
there were not then splendid mansions,
- Bt. 15; Fox 48, 4.
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Wæs forðon hæbbend monigra hámas
erat enim habens multas possessiones,
- Mt. Kmbl. Lind. 19, 22.
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Hig cíptun ealle hire hámas
vendebant omnia prædia sua,
- Gen. 47, 20.
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On hira hámon
in possessionibus suis,
- 48, 6.
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Se cyng him wel gegifod hæfde on hámon and on golde and seolfre and forbærndon Tegntún and eác fela óðra gódra háma ... and ðone hám æt Peonhó ... and ðone hám æt Wealthám and óðra cotlífa fela
the king had given him many gifts oft vills and of gold and silver. And they burned down Teignton and many other good vills too ..., and the vill at Penhoc ..., and the vill at Waltham, and many other hamlets,
- Chr. 1001; Erl. 136, 16-32.
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Ðǽr hé rád betwih his hámum oððe túnum
equitantem inter civitates sive villas,
- Bd. 2, 16; S. 520, 10.
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Abbud of Peortaneá ðam hám
Abbas de Monasterio Peartanea,
- S. 519, 28.
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Æt hám
domi,
- Mk. Skt. 9, 33: Lk. Skt. 9, 61.
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Ðú nére æt hám
you were not at home,
- Cod. Dipl. Kmbl. iv. 26, 9.
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Hám, acc. is used adverbially after verbs of motion Ðá hé hám com
cum venisset domum,
- Mt. Kmbl. 9, 28.
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Hig cyrdon ealle hám
reversi sunt unusquisque in domum suam,
- Jn. Skt. 7, 53.
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Ðá se cing lýfde eallon Myrceon hám
the king allowed all the Mercians to go home,
- Chr. 1049; Erl. 172, 37: 1066; Erl. 200, 9.
Bosworth, Joseph. “hám.” 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/18075.
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