dæg-rím
- noun [ neuter ]
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Wiste ðe geornor ðæt his aldres wæs ende gegongen, dógora dægrím
he knew the better that his life's end was passed, his days' number,
- Beo. Th. 1650 ;
- B. 823 .
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Upon ðæt ígland ðǽr Apollines dóhtor wunode dægrímes worn upon the island where Apollo's daughter dwelt a number of days, Bt. Met. Fox 26, 66; Met. 26, 33: Cd. 47; Th. 60, 1; Gen. 975: 67; Th. 80, 20; Gen. 1331, On his dægríme
in his number of days,
- Exon. 83 b ;
- Th. 314, 10;
- Mód. 12 .
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Dægríme fród
wise in number of days,
130 a;- Th. 498, 15;
- Rä. 88, 2: Cd. 99 ;
- Th. 131, 9;
- Gen. 2173 .
Bosworth, Joseph. “dæg-rím.” 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/7353.
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