Anglosaxon

English

Noun

Anglosaxon (plural Anglosaxons)

  1. Rare form of Anglo-Saxon.

Adjective

Anglosaxon (comparative more Anglosaxon, superlative most Anglosaxon)

  1. Rare form of Anglo-Saxon.
    • 1849, John Mitchell Kemble, The Saxons in England:
      The Anglosaxon belief in the Shieldmaidens comes to us indeed in a darkened form, yet we can hardly doubt that it survived.
    • 1869, Alexander J[ohn] Ellis, On Early English Pronunciation, with Especial Reference to Shakspere and Chaucer, [], London: [] [F]or the Philological Society, by Asher & Co., London & Berlin, and for the Early English Text Society, and the Chaucer Society, by Trübner & Co., [], title page:
      on EARLY ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION, with especial reference to SHAKSPERE AND CHAUCER, containing an investigation of the correspondence of writing with speech in england, from the anglosaxon period to the present day, []
    • 1976, George D. Painter, William Caxton: A Biography, New York, N.Y.: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, published 1977:
      Working from the later, twelfth-century forms Kachestone, Cakeston, the great etymologist Skeat suggested an original Cahestun, meaning the farm of an Anglosaxon settler named Cah; []
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