hræd
- adjective
-
Hræd oððe glæd
agilis:
hræddre
agilior:
ealra hrædost
agillimus,
- Ælfc. Gr. 5 ;
- Som. 5, 6.
-
Hræd oððe glæd
alacer,
- 9, 18 ;
- Som. 9, 66.
-
Tó hræd ierre
præceþs ira,
- Past. 13, 2 ;
- Swt. 79, 14, 11.
-
Worda tó hræd,
- Exon. 88 a ;
- Th. 330, 13 ;
- Vy. 50.
-
Sum biþ hræd tæfle
one is quick at games of chance,
- 79 a ;
- Th. 297, 25 ;
- Crä. 73.
-
Ðæt wæs hræd ǽrendraca se tylode tó secganne hys ǽrndunge ǽr ðon ðe hé lyfde
that was a quick messenger, who strove to tell his message before he lived,
- Shrn. 95, 20.
-
Se gást is hræd
spiritus promptus est,
- Mt. Kmbl. 26, 41.
-
Níþ godes hreð [hréð ?] of heofonum
God's anger swift from heaven,
- Cd. 206 ;
- Th. 255, 6 ;
- Dan. 620.
-
Hræd and unlæt,
- Exon. 113 b ;
- Th. 436, 9 ;
- Rä. 54, 11.
-
Ðú ðe on hrædum færelde ðone heofon ymbhweorfest
qui rapido cælum turbine versas,
- Bt. 4 ;
- Fox 6, 31.
-
On hræde sprǽce
in prosam,
- Bd. 5, 23 ;
- S. 648, 22.
-
Hræde weámetta
sudden sadnesses,
- L. I. P. 10 ;
- Th. ii. 318, 32.
-
Hrade [MS. T. hræþe; Ps. Th. hraðe] fót heora tó ágeótenne blód
veloces pedes eorum ad effundendum sanguinem,
- Ps. Spl. 13, 6.
-
Ða hradan ðonne sint tó manianne
præcipites admonendi sunt,
- Past. 39, 1 ;
- Swt. 281, 20.
-
Mé is fenýce fóre hreðre is ðæs gores sunu gonge hrædra
more swift than I is the fen-frog in its course, the son of dirt [beetle] is more rapid in its walk,
- Exon. 111 a ;
- Th. 426, 9-12 ;
- Rä. 41, 71-2.
Bosworth, Joseph. “hræd.” 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/19597.
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