CYN
- noun [ masculineneuter ]
-
Ðæt hie ne móton ǽgnian mid yrmþum Israhéla cyn
that they may not hold in misery the race of Israel,
- Cd. 156 ;
- Th. 194, 24;
- Exod. 265: 170 ;
- Th. 213, 21;
- Exod. 555 .
-
Monna cynn
hominum genus,
- Exon. 20b ;
- Th. 55, 23;
- Cri. 888: 98b ;
- Th. 370, 1;
- Seel. 50: Cd. 212 ;
- Th. 261, 33;
- Dan. 735 .
-
Eorþan cynn
terræ tribus,
- Ps. Th. 71, 18.
-
Eal engla cynn
all the race of angels,
- Exon. 75a ;
- Th. 281, 10;
- Jul. 644 .
-
Eall gimma cynn
all kinds of gems,
- Andr. Kmbl. 3037 ;
- An. 1521 .
-
Fór cynn æfter cynne
tribe went after tribe,
- Cd. 161 ;
- Th. 200, 3;
- Exod. 351 .
-
Ðis cynn ne byþ útadryfen
hoc genus non ejicitur,
- Mt. Bos. 17, 21.
-
Ðæt wíf wæs hǽðen, Sirofenisces cynnes
erat mulier gentīlis, Syrophœnissa genere,
- Mk. Bos. 7, 26.
-
Lá næddrena cyn
progenies viperarum,
- Mt. Bos. 3, 7.
-
Of cynne on cynn
from generation to generation;
a progenie in, progeniem,- Ps. Th. 84, 5: 88, 1.
-
Adames cyn
the race of Adam,
- Cd. 222 ;
- Th. 289, 35;
- Sat. 408: Exon. 22a ;
- Th. 59, 33;
- Cri. 961 .
-
Ymb fisca cynn
de piscium genere,
- Exon. 96b ;
- Th. 360, 6;
- Wal. 1 .
-
Syndon twá cynn , — masculinum, ðæt is werlíc, and femininum, wíflíc. Werlíc cynn biþ ðes wer hic vir: there are two genders, — masculine, that is manlike, and feminine, womanlike. Masculine gender is ðes wer
this man,
- Ælfc. Gr. 6 ;
- Som. 5, 27, 28.
-
Ǽlc nýten biþ oððe he, oððe heó
every animal is either he, or she,
- 6 ;
- Som. 5, 34.
-
Neutrum is náðor cynd, ne werlíces, ne wíflíces
neuter is neither kind, neither of male nor of female,
- 6 ;
- Som. 5, 32.
-
Ðis gebýraþ oftost to náðrum cynne, swá swá is ðis word hoc verbum: this oftest belongeth to the neuter gender, as is ðis word
this word,
- 6 ;
- Som. 5. 35 .
-
Twílíces cynnes ðæt Is
dubii generis,
- 6 ;
- Som. 5, 46.
-
Sume naman synd óðres cynnes on ánfealdum getele, and óðres cynnes on mænigfealdum getele
some nouns are of one gender in the singular number, and of another gender in the plural number,
- 13 ;
- Som. 16, 25.
-
The m. f. n. occur in the following sentence, indicated by the articles se, seó, ðæt Seó sáwel ys má ðonne se líchama, and se líchama má ðonne ðæt reáf
anima plus est guam esca, et corpus plus quam vestimentum,
- Lk. Bos. 12, 23.
-
Hwæðeres cynnes bearn heó cennan sceal
of which sex she shall bear a child,
- Lchdm. iii. 144, 6.
Bosworth, Joseph. “CYN.” 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/7096.
Checked: 1