cýping
- noun [ feminine ]
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Ðæt nán cýping ne sý Sunnan dagum
that no marketing be on Sundays,
- L. Ath. i. 24 ;
- Th. i. 212, 15: v. 10 ;
- Th. i. 240, 9.
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Ða ealdorbiscopas geþafedon ðæt ðǽr cýping binnan gehæfd wǽre
the high-priests allowed chapping to be held therein,
- Homl. Th. i. 406, 6.
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Cýpingc
negotiatio,
- Ælfc. Gl. 81 ;
- Som. 73, 18;
- Wrt. Voc. 47, 25.
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Sunnan dæges cýpinge we forbeódaþ æghwár
we forbid Sunday's traffic everywhere,
- L. N. P. L. 55 ;
- Th. ii. 298, 21.
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Cýpingce ,
- L. C. E. 15 ;
- Th. i. 368, 15.
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Ne fortruwige he hiene æt ðære cípinge
let them not be too confident of their bargain,
- Past. 44, 6;
- Hat. MS. 62b, 9.
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Cýpinga
nundinæ,
- Ælfc. Gr. 13 ;
- Som. 16, 21.
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Ðæt hí Sunnan dæges cýpinga georne geswícan
that they strictly abstain from Sunday marketings,
- L. Eth. vi. 44 ;
- Th. i. 326, 21: vi. 22 ;
- Th. i. 320, 12: v. 13 ;
- Th. i. 308, 11: ix. 17 ;
- Th. i. 344, 7.
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Ðæs túnes cýping and seó innung ðara portgerihta gange into ðære hálgan stówe
let the market of the town and the revenue of the port dues go to the holy place,
- Cod. Dipl. 598 ;
- A. D. 978 ;
- Kmbl. iii. 138, 10.
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To-middes ðære cýpinge in the midst of the market, M. H. 117a. Andlang strǽte út on ða cýpinge, swá up anlang cýpinge
along the road out to the market-place, so up along the market-place,
- Cod. Dipl. 720 ;
- A. D. 1012 ;
- Kmbl. iii. 359, 12, 13.
Bosworth, Joseph. “cýping.” 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/7178.
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