Bosworth Toller's

Anglo-Saxon

Dictionary online

slícian

  • verb [ weak ]
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Grammar
slícian, p. ode
To make sleek, smooth, or glossy
Show examples
  • Heó glytenode swá scýnende sunne oððe nígslýcod hrægel

    • Shrn. 149, 8.
    [v.
    • Prompt. Parv. 458
    , note 2, where 'to sleek clothes' is quoted from Kenneth, and a passage from Walter de Bibelesworth is given (v. also
    • Wrt. Voc. i. 172, 13
    ): la dame ge ta koyf luche (slike).]
  • Til sleuth and slepe slyken his sides
    • Piers. P. 2, 98.
  • The word is also applied to making a fair show in speech:

    Alle ðine wordes beoð isliked, And so bisemed and biliked

    • O. and N. 841.
  • Wordes afaited and ysliked

    • Ayenb. 212, 2.
  • He can so well his wordes slike

    • Gower ii. 365, 22.
  • See, too,
    • Jamieson's Dictionary
    ,

    sleekie

    fawning and deceitful

  • sleekit

    smooth, shining (of the face); but also deceitful

  • sleekit-gabbit

    smooth-tongued

Similar entries
v. slíc
Linked entries
v.  slic slíc slýcod.
Full form

Word-wheel

  • slícian, v.