sundor
See also: sundor-
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *sundraz, whence also Old High German suntar, Old Norse sundr
Pronunciation
Adverb
sundor
- apart, separate, private, aloof, by one's self
- Sundor ánra gehwilc herige ðec. ― Let each one separately praise thee.
Derived terms
- onsundrum (“singly, separately, apart: privately: especially, in sunder”)
- sundorcræft m (“special power or capacity”)
- sundorcræftiġlīċe (“with special skill”)
- sundorcȳþþu f (“special knowledge”)
- sundorfeoh n (“private property”)
- sundorġecynd n (“special quality”)
- sundorġenga m (“solitary (animal)”)
- sundorġerēfland n (“land reserved to the jurisdiction of a ġerēfa, reeve”)
- special gift, privilege f
- sundorhālga m (“Pharisee”)
- sundorland n (“land set apart, private property”)
- sundorliċ (“special”)
- sundorlīċe (“apart”, adverb)
- sundorlīf n (“life in seclusion”)
- sundormæsse f (“separate mass, special mass”)
- sundornotu f (“special office”)
- sundornytt f (“special use, office, or service”)
- sundorriht n (“special right, privilege”)
- sundorseld n (“special seat, throne”)
- sundorsetl n (“hermitage”)
- sundorsprǣċ f (“private talk, private conversation, private conference”)
- sundorweorþung f (“special honor, prerogative”)
- sundorwīċ n (“separate dwelling”)
- sundorwine m (“bosom friend”)
- sundorwīs (“specially wise”)
- sundorwundor n (“special wonder”)
- sundoryrfe n (“private inheritance”)
Related terms
- āsundran, āsundrian (“to divide, separate, disjoin, sever; distinguish, except. asunder”)
- āsyndrung f (“division”)
- sundrian (“to separate, sunder”)
Descendants
See also
References
- John R. Clark Hall (1916) “sundor”, in A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary[1], 2nd edition, New York: Macmillan
- Joseph Bosworth and T. Northcote Toller (1898) “sundor”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.