Eoforwic
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
A folk-etymological alteration, based on eofor (“boar”) and the common placename suffix wīc (“village”), of the earlier Latin Eborācum, from pre-Brythonic *Eborākom, from Proto-Celtic *eburos (“yew-tree”) (compare Welsh efwr, Breton evor).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈe͜o.forˌwiːk/, [ˈe͜o.vorˌwiːk]
Proper noun
Eoforwīc n
- York
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
- Hīe restaþ begen on Eoferwīc ċeastre on ānum portice.
- They both lie in a portico in York.
- The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | Eoforwīc | — |
| accusative | Eoforwīc | — |
| genitive | Eoforwīces | — |
| dative | Eoforwīce | — |
Derived terms
- Eoforwīcċeaster (“York”)
- Eoforwīcsċīr (“Yorkshire”)