- ("herald,
messenger from an authority, preacher"),
itself deriving from
beodan ("to proclaim",
which has a
modern descendant in the
English verb bid)....
- Bīeda (Anglian Bēda). It is an Old
English short name
formed on the root of
bēodan "to bid, command". The name also
occurs in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, s...
- drěmati "to doze, drowse, slumber" *bʰewdʰ- "to be awake, be aware" bid (< OE
bēodan); bede (< OE bēden); bode (< OE bodian)
anabiudan punthánomai "I learn"...
- parts" by heart. For this verb they are
bēodan, bīett, bēad, budon, geboden.
These are: The infinitive:
bēodan. The same
vowel is used
through most of...
-
obsolete and was
confused with bid in the
sense of
command (from Old English:
beodan, 'to offer, present', and
hence 'to announce, or command'; cf. German: bieten...
- *eu ēo N/A *deupaz > dēop "deep"; *fleugǭ > flēoge "fly"; *beudaną >
bēodan "to command" (Anglian) +c,g,h;rc,rg,rh;lc,lg,lh
Anglian smoothing ē N/A...
- ēo N/A /eː/ N/A /iː/ N/A PG *deupaz > OE dēop > "deep"; PG *beudaną > OE
bēodan "to command" (+w) /eu/ > /iu/ N/A /(j)uː/ N/A PG *hrewwaną > OE hrēowan...
- verb is *bod-,
originally *bud- < PIE *bhudh- (cognate with Old
English bēodan "to offer, announce",
Sanskrit bodhati "to awaken, inquire"); the variant...
- 239-54. Hood, Todd W. “Could
Brego and
Nergend be the
Direct Objects of
Beodan in
Lines 497a-498b of the Old
English Phoenix?” Matheliende. Vol. Vii, No...