landgemirce

Old English

Etymology

From land (land) +‎ ġemirċe (limit, boundary)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈlɑnd.jeˌmir.t͡ʃe/, [ˈlɑnd.jeˌmirˠ.t͡ʃe]

Noun

landġemirċe n

  1. boundary, limit
    • late 9th century, translation of Orosius’ History Against the Pagans
      Se westsūþende Europe landġemirce is in Ispania westeweardum et ðǣm gārseċġe, and mǣst æt þǣm iġlande, þætte Gaðes hātte, þǣr scīet sē Wendelsǣ up of þǣm gārseċġe; þǣr ēac Ercoles sȳla standað.
      The southwestern limit of Europe is in Hispania at the western ocean, and the westernmost part is at the island known as Gades, where the Mediterranean flows into the ocean and where the Pillars of Hercules stand.

Declension

Strong a-stem:

singular plural
nominative landġemirċe landġemirċu
accusative landġemirċe landġemirċu
genitive landġemirċes landġemirċa
dative landġemirċe landġemirċum

Descendants

  • English: mulch

References