spræce
Old English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈspræː.t͡ʃe/
Etymology 1
From Proto-West Germanic *sprākijā.
Noun
sprǣċe f
- a talk
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
- Æfter þyssere sprǣċe cōmon ðā drȳmen, and hæfdon him mid tweġen ormǣte dracan, ðǣra orðung ācwealde þæt earme mennisċ: ac sē apostol Matheus þā dracan ġeswefode, and siððan of ðām lande adrǣfde, swā þæt hī næfre siððan þǣr ġesewene nǣron.
- After this speech came the sorcerers, who had two enormous dragons which them, whose breath killed that poor man: but the apostle Matthew lulled the dragons to sleep, and then drove them from the land, so that they have never been seen there since.
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
- discourse
Declension
Weak n-stem:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | sprǣċe | sprǣċan |
accusative | sprǣċan | sprǣċan |
genitive | sprǣċan | sprǣċena |
dative | sprǣċan | sprǣċum |
Related terms
- ġesprǣċe
- *sprǣċe n
Etymology 2
Noun
sprǣċe
- inflection of sprǣċ:
- accusative/genitive/dative singular
- nominative/accusative plural
Etymology 3
Verb
sprǣce
- inflection of sprecan:
- second-person singular preterite indicative
- singular preterite subjunctive