muþ
Middle English
Noun
muþ
- (Early Middle English) alternative form of mouth
Old English
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Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *munþ.
Cognates
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /muːθ/
Noun
mūþ m
- mouth
- 10th century, Exeter Book Riddle 8[1]:
- Iċ þurh mūþ sprece mongum reordum,…
- I speak with many voices through mouth,…
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
- Þā besēah Martinus wið þǣs sċeoccan lēoht, ġemyndiġ on mōde hū sē Metoda Drihten cwæð on his godspelle þe his godcundan tōcyme, and cwæð tō ðām lēasan mid ġelǣredum mūðe, "Ne sǣde ūre Hǣlend þæt hē swā wolde bēon mid purpuran gehīwod, oððe mid helme scīnende, þonne hē eft cōme mid engla ðrymme." Đā fordwān sē deofol drēoriġ him fram, and sēo stōw ðā stanc mid ormǣtum stenċe, æfter andwerdnysse þǣs eġeslīċan gāstes.
- Then Martinus beheld the demon's light, mindful of what the Lord God said in his gospel about his divine coming, and said to the false one with learned mouth, "Our Savior did not say that he would be habited in purple, or that he would have a shining crown, when he came again with a host of angels." Then the sad devil disappeared, and the place stank with a powerful stench after the presence of the horrible spirit.
- opening, door, gate
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | mūþ | mūþas |
| accusative | mūþ | mūþas |
| genitive | mūþes | mūþa |
| dative | mūþe | mūþum |
Derived terms
Descendants
References
- John R. Clark Hall (1916), “muþ”, in A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary[2], 2nd edition, New York: Macmillan