ece
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Hé wæs geþreád mid fefre . . . Þá ǽlce dæge weóx se ece and seó ádl hefegode
correptus febri . . . Cum per dies singulos languor ingravesceret,
- Gr. D. 175, 17.
-
Ðǽr (
in hell) is éce æce (ece, v. l. ),
- Wlfst. 114, 4.
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Nis þǽr (
in heaven
) ǽnig sár geméted, ne ádl, ne ece,- Bl. H. 25, 30.
-
Heora sina forscruncon . . . ꝥ hí hrýmdon for ece,
- Hml. S. 35, 318.
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Hé biþ ece hál,
- Lch. ii. 308, 2.
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Manig man hæfþ micelne ece on his eágum,
- Lch. ii. 32, 4.
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Wiþ bánece . . . Beþe tó fýre swíðe þone ece,
- 70, 4.
-
Ne sceal mon þisne drincan sellan on foreweardne (
in the early stage of
) þone ece and þá ádle, ac ymb fela nihta,- 256, 19.
-
Hé mid sáre geswenced bið, mid mislicum ecum,
- Bl. H. 59, 8. v.
Bosworth, Joseph. “ece.” 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/43599.
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