fæderrice

Old English

Etymology

fæder +‎ rīċe

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfæ.derˌriː.t͡ʃe/

Noun

fæderrīċe n

  1. a doubtful word of vague meaning; see below

Usage notes

  • Since fæder was usually indeclinable in the singular, it is quite possible this was actually two separate words forming the phrase “father's kingdom,” with no idiomatic meaning. That would be much more straightforward than “paternal kingdom,” the usual translation given by modern academics who believe this to be a compound word. See fæderland, which is similar.

Declension

Strong ja-stem:

singular plural
nominative fæderrīċe fæderrīċu
accusative fæderrīċe fæderrīċu
genitive fæderrīċes fæderrīċa
dative fæderrīċe fæderrīċum

References