π²π°πππ°π»π³π°π½
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Gothic[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From π²π°- (ga-) + *πππ°π»π³π°π½ (*staldan), from Proto-Germanic *staldanΔ . Related to Old English stealdan (βto possessβ).[1][2]
Verb[edit]
π²π°πππ°π»π³π°π½ β’ (gastaldan) (perfective)
Conjugation[edit]
Related terms[edit]
- π°π²π»π°πΉππ²π°πππ°π»π³π (aglaitgastalds, βacquisitive, greedyβ)
- π°π½π³πππ°π»π³π°π½ (andstaldan, βto supply, put at someone's disposalβ)
References[edit]
- ^ J. Bosworth (2010 July 19) βstealdanβ, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online[1], retrieved November 16, 2017
- ^ Anne L. Klinck (1992) βPart II: Texts and Textual Notesβ, in The Old English Elegies: A Critical Edition and Genre Study[2], MontrΓ©al, Canada: McGill-Queen's University Press, βISBN, page 148