tún
-
Sí ǽfre ðis mynster fram eallum eorðlicum þeówdóme freóh and mid eallum ðám túnum
(uillulis)
ðe him tó gelicgað,- C.D. iii. 350, 5.
-
Syndon þá burga forhergode and þá ceastra tóworpone, cyrcan forbærnde and mynstra tóworpene, and eác gehwylce túnas ge wera ge wífa fram hǽðenum mannum gewéste
depopulatae urbes, eversa castra, concrematae ecclesiae, destructa sunt monasteria virorum ac feminarum, desolata ab hominibus praedia,
- Gr. D. 258, 17.
-
Hí úp cómon æt Leptan þǽm túne (
ad Leptim oppidum
),- Ors. 4, 10; S. 202, 9.
-
LXXXII túna him eódon on hand
oppida octoginta duo in deditionem cessere Romanis,
- 4, 6; S. 174, 22.
- v. fel-, Lunden-, mylen-, siru-tún.
Bosworth, Joseph. “tún.” 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/59294.
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