Cuþwine
Old English
Etymology
By surface analysis, cūþ (“known”) + wine (“friend”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkuːθ.wi.ne/, [ˈkuːð.wi.ne]
Proper noun
Cūþwine m
- a male given name
- Cuthwine of Wessex
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- ...sē Ōswald wæs Æþelbalding, Æþelbald Cynebalding, Cynebald Cūðwining, Cūþwine Ceawlining.
- ...Oswald was son of Aethelbald, Aethelbald son of Cynebald, Cynebald son of Cuthwine, [and] Cuthwine son of Ceawlin.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Declension
Strong i-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | Cūþwine | — |
| accusative | Cūþwine | — |
| genitive | Cūþwines | — |
| dative | Cūþwine | — |