giululing
Old English
Etymology
Possibly from Giuli (not related to iūlius (“July”)), alternative form of geola ("December/January") + -ling (diminutive suffix), the connection being that December is the month of the winter solstice, July of the summer (i.e. little) solstice. Geola may also be etymologically connected with the solstice—see further there.[1]
Noun
gīululing m
- (hapax) July.
- 8th c., J. H. Hessels, editor, An Eighth-Century Latin–Anglo-Saxon Glossary [<span title="Preserved in the Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, (MS. No. 144)">…] , Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, published 1890, page 100:
- Quintus . giululing
- Fifth [month, i.e. July] . giululing
References
- Eduard Eckhardt (1903) “Die angelsächsischen deminutivbildungen”, in Johannes Hoops, editor, Englische Studien, volume 32, Leipzig, pages 333–334
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