-heort

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Old English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Proto-West Germanic *-hert(ī), from Proto-Germanic *-hertaz, derived from *hertô (heart) (Old English heorte). Cognate with Old Saxon -hert, Old High German -herz, Gothic -𐌷𐌰𐌹𐍂𐍄𐍃 (-hairts).

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /xe͜ort/, [he͜orˠt]

Suffix[edit]

-heort

  1. -hearted
    ċeald (cold) + ‎-heort → ‎ċealdheort (coldhearted)
    clǣne (pure) + ‎-heort → ‎clǣnheort (pure-hearted)
    hāt (hot) + ‎-heort → ‎hātheort (furious)
    heard (hard) + ‎-heort → ‎heardheort (callous)
    milde (kind) + ‎-heort → ‎mildheort (kindhearted)
    rūm (spacious) + ‎-heort → ‎rūmheort (big-hearted)
    wulf (wolf) + ‎-heort → ‎wulfheort (savage)

Declension[edit]

See also[edit]