- "hot"
geirid "warm (v)" *gʷʰerm- "warm" լույս luys "light"
light ( ← OE
lēoht "brightness") lūx λευκός leukós "bright, shining, white" روز ruz "day" रोक...
- Norðhymbra
cyning ofslægen fram
Sigan on .viiii.
Kalendas Octobris, 7
heofonlic leoht wæs lome
gesewen þær þær he ofslægen wæs, 7 he wæs
bebyrged on Hagustaldesee...
- godes; /
gefean hæfdon, / þæt hie me þegon, / sægrunde neah; / me**** ƿunde / uppe lægon, / þæt syðþan na / ford brimliðende /
Leoht eastan com, / ......
- Translation: Anglo-Saxon ᛞ Dæg bẏþ
drihtnes sond,
deore mannum, mære
metodes leoht, mẏrgþ and
tohiht eadgum and earmum,
eallum brice. Day, the
glorious light...
-
cheerful person. The Old
English leoht could be a
person who is ‘bright’ or ‘cheerful’. The two
forms of
light -
leoht and
lioht had
distinct meanings...
-
Nocturns Sunday OH 1 11420 2 123r Deus qui celi
lumen es Cot du der
himiles leoht pist
Matins Sunday OH 7 4491 3 123v
Splendor paternae gloriae Schimo faterlicher...
- *h₁le(n)gʷʰ-, *h₁ln̥gʷʰ-ro-, *h₁ln̥gʷʰ-u- "light (in weight)"
light (< OE
lēoht)
leihts "light" < *h₁lengʷʰ-tos; OHG
lungar "fast" < *h₁ln̥gʷʰ-ros levis...
-
notes that the
words lating and
leeting are
derived from the
Saxon word
leoht,
meaning "light." Gl****ie (1969)
suggests that long
after 1
November was...
- indic. līþ (WS līehþ) "lends"; PIE *lengwhtos > PG *lį̄htaz > OE līht (WS
lēoht) > "light" (in weight) (+CC) /i/ /i/ /ɪ/ /ɪ/ (+g,h) /iː/ /iː/ /aɪ/ /aɪ/...
-
sweordum aswefede, þæt syðþan na ymb
brontne ford brimliðende lade ne letton.
Leoht eastan com,
beorht beacen godes; Beowulf,
lines 562–70a
Crowne drew on examples...