A Concise Dictionary of Middle English - From A.D. 1150 to 1580 by Walter William Skeat;A. L. Mayhew
page 12 of 1116 (01%)
page 12 of 1116 (01%)
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alphabetical index to the same, at pp. lxxxi, lxxxii. The same Preface
further contains some account of the three principal Middle-English dialects (p. xl), and Outlines of the Grammar (p. xlv). It also explains the meaning of the symbols þ, ð (both used for _th_), 3* (used for _y_ initially, _gh_ medially, and _gh_ or _z_ finally), with other necessary information. THE CLARENDON PRESS GLOSSARIES. This work gives _all_ the words and _every_ form contained in the glossaries to eleven publications in the Clarendon Press Series, as below:-- S.--SPECIMENS OF EARLY ENGLISH, ed. Morris, Part I: from A.D. 1150 to A. D. 1300. This book contains extracts from:--~1~. Old English Homilies, ed. Morris, E. E. T. S. 1867-8, pp. 230-241; ~2~. The Saxon Chronicle, A.D. 1137, 1138,1140, 1154; ~3~. Old Eng. Homilies, ed. Morris, First Series, pp. 40-53; ~4~. The same, Second Series, pp. 89-109; ~5~. The Ormulum, ed. White, ll. 962-1719, pp. 31-57; ~6~. Layamon's Brut, ed. Madden, ll. 13785-14387 [_add_ 13784 _to the number of the line in the reference_]; ~7~. Sawles Warde, from Old Eng. Homilies, ed. Morris, First Series, pp. 245-249, 259-267; ~8~. St. Juliana, ed. Cockayne and Brock; ~9~. The Ancren Riwle, ed. Morton, pp. 208-216, 416-430; ~10~. The Wooing of our Lord, from Old Eng. Homilies, ed. Morris, First Series, pp. 277-283; ~11~. A Good Orison of our Lady, from the same, pp. 191-199; ~12~. A Bestiary, the Lion, Eagle, and Ant, from An Old Eng. Miscellany, ed. Morris; ~13~. Old Kentish |
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