whale-road
English
Etymology
From whale + road, after Old English hranrād, from hran (“whale”) + rād (“road”).
Noun
the whale-road (plural whale-roads)
- (literary) The ocean; the open sea.
- Synonyms: whale's road, whale's way
- 1907, John Gibb, “Beowulf”, in The Children's Hour, volume 4, page 3:
- […] and his name was called Scyld. He grew to man's estate, and became a mighty king, and subdued the peoples under him. All the neighboring peoples across the whale roads obeyed Scyld.
- 1999, Seamus Heaney, transl., Beowulf:
- In the end each clan on the outlying coasts / beyond the whale-road had to yield to him / and begin to pay tribute. That was one good king.