samod
See also: samod-
Middle English
Alternative forms
- somed, somet, sameþ
Etymology
Inherited from Old English samod, from Proto-West Germanic *samaþ, from Proto-Germanic *samaþa (“together”). Akin to Old High German samit (“together”), German samt, sammt (“together with”).
Adverb
samod (Early Middle English)
- Together; in unison or simultaneously.
- Þenne faræþ þa haliᵹe men ... ant samod siþiæð mid englæ werod. — Bodley Homilies, c1175
- Bound or fastened together.
- c. 1225, “Feorðe dale: fondunges”, in Ancrene Ƿiſſe (MS. Corpus Christi 402), Herefordshire, published c. 1235, folio 78, verso; republished at Cambridge: Parker Library on the Web, 2018 January:
- […] ah bi þe teileſ ha beoð ſomet · ⁊ beoreð ðes deofleſ bleaſen þe bꝛune of galneſſe ·
- […] both are bound together at their extremities, and they have the Devil's flames with them: the fire of lasciviousness.
Derived terms
- samodnesse
Old English
Alternative forms
- somed
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *samaþa (“together”). Akin to Old High German samit (“together”), German samt (“together with”), sammt (“together with”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɑ.mod/
Adverb
samod
Preposition
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samod
- together with, at (of time)
- Samod ǣrdæġe eode æðele cempa self mid gesīðum ― At dawn went the noble warrior himself with his comrades. (Beowulf)
Derived terms
- See samod-
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