- term 'Wright'
comes from the
circa 700 AD Old
English word 'wryhta' or '
wyrhta',
meaning worker or
shaper of wood.
Later it
became any
occupational worker...
-
meaning and
sometimes yet
another suffix meaning "-er".
Examples include wyrhta ("worker") →
wyrhte and foregenġa ("predecessor") → foregenġe. Sometimes...
-
common in its time as
being horse-driven and four-wheeled. The suffix,
wyrhta/wright,
refers to a maker/builder. The
earliest public record of the name...
- Domnaill, he had done so on the
condition that the
latter would be his mid-
wyrhta ("co-worker", "even-worker", "fellow-worker", "together-wright"). Less reliable...
- Domnaill, he had done so on the
condition that the
latter would be his mid-
wyrhta ("co-worker", "even-worker", "fellow-worker", "together-wright"). Less reliable...
-
Ealle þa ðry
naman befehð an
godcund miht and is an ece God,
aldende and
wyrhta ealra gesceafta. Him syle sy lof and weorðmynt in
ealra worulda woruld a...