wolcn
Middle English
Noun
wolcn
- (Early Middle English) alternative form of welken (“sky”)
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *wolkn, from Proto-Germanic *wulkną.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /wolkn/, [woɫkn]
Noun
wolcn n
- cloud
- c. 994, Ælfric, On the Twelve Winds
- Fēower heafodwindas synd. Sē fyrmesta is ēasterne wind, subsolanus ġehāten, for þām ðe hē blæwð frām ðǣre sunnan upspringe, ⁊ ys swyðe ġemetegod. Sē ōðer heafodwind is sūðerne, auster ġehāten, sē āstyreð wolcnu, ⁊ ligettas, ⁊ mistlice cwyld blǣwð geond ðās eorðan.
- There are four headwinds. The first is the eastern wind, called subsolanus, because it blows from where the sun rises, and is very moderate. The second headwind is southern, called auster, which stirs up clouds, and lightnings, and blows various plagues around the earth.
- Næs þā nān wolcn on þǣre lyfte.
- There wasn't a cloud in the sky.
- Sēo sunne flīeġþ hēah ofer þā wolcnu.
- The sun flies high above the clouds.
- c. 994, Ælfric, On the Twelve Winds
- (in the plural) the sky, the heavens
- Þā wolcnu sweartodon.
- The skies darkened.
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | wolcn | wolcnu |
| accusative | wolcn | wolcnu |
| genitive | wolcnes | wolcna |
| dative | wolcne | wolcnum |