traht

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Middle English

Etymology

From Old English traht (text, passage: exposition, treatise, commentary) see below

Noun

traht (plural trahts)

  1. treatise, exposition, commentary
    • To þysen twam wifmannen awrat se ilca Jeronimus manigfealde tractbec, — Early English Homilies, c1150
    • Ðis godspel is langsum & hæfð longne traht. — Homilies in MS Bodley, c1175

Derived terms

References

  • Middle English Dictionary, tract

Old English

Etymology

From trahtnian, trahtian (to treat, comment on, expound, consider), from Proto-Indo-European *derk- (to see, behold, observe, notice), cognate with Old High German trahta.

Pronunciation

Noun

traht m (nominative plural trahtas)

  1. text, passage, exposition, treatise, commentary
    ... óððæt wé ðone traht oferrædan mágon... until we can read over the passage

Declension

Derived terms

References