CORN
- noun [ neuter ]
-
Corn
frumentum
- Ælfc. Gl. 59 ;
- Som. 67, 122 ;
- Wrt. Voc. 38, 44.
-
Wæs corn swá dýre, swá nán man ǽr ne gemunde
corn was so dear, as no man before remembered it
- Chr. 1044 ;
- Erl. 168, 21 ;
- Homl. Th. ii. 68, 17.
-
Hie wǽron benumene ǽgðer ge ðæs ceápes ge ðæs cornes
they were deprived both of the cattle and of the corn
- Chr. 895 ;
- Erl. 93, 18 ;
- Bd. de nat. rerum ;
- Wrt. popl. science 10, 8 ;
- Lchdm. iii. 254, 4.
-
Se Déma gegaderaþ ðæt clǽne corn into his berne
the Judge will gather the pure corn into his barn
- Homl. Th. ii. 68, 18 ;
- Chr. 894 ;
- Erl. 93, 11.
-
Hý heora corn ripon
they reaped their corn
- Ors. 4, 8 ;
- Bos. 90, 33 ;
- Chr. 896 ;
- Erl. 94, 6 ;
- Past. 52 ;
- Hat. MS.
-
Corn
granum
- Wrt. Voc. 83, 16.
-
Ðæt hwǽtene corn wunaþ ána
granum frumenti solum manet,
- Jn. Bos. 12, 24 ;
- Bt. 35, 1 ;
- Fox 156, 2, 4.
-
Senepes corn
granum sinapis
- Lk. Bos. 17, 6.
-
Heofena ríce is geworden gelíc senepes corne, ðæt seów se man ou hys æcre
simile est regnum cælorum grano sinapis, quod homo seminavit in agro suo
- Mt. Bos. 13, 31, ;
- Lk. Bos. 13, 19.
-
Hægl byþ hwítust corna
hail is the whitest of grains
- Runic pm.9 ;
- Kmbl. 341, 4 ;
- Hick. Thes. i. 135.
-
Se æppel monig corn oninnan him hæfþ
the apple has many seeds inside it,
- Past. 15, 5 ;
- Hat. MS. 19b, 23.
-
Ifig byrþ corn golde gelíce
ivy bears berries like gold
- Herb. 121, 1 ;
- Lchdm. i. 234, 4.
-
Genim ðysse wyrte twentig corna
take twenty grains of this herb [ivy ]
- 121, 2 ;
- Lchdm. i. 234, 6.
-
Ðis mæg horse wið ðon ðe him biþ corn on ða fét
this may be for a horse which has corns on his feet
- Lchdm. iii. 62, 22.
Bosworth, Joseph. “CORN.” 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/6581.
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