eac
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See also: EAC
Old English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Proto-Germanic *auk. Cognate with Old Frisian āk, Old Saxon ok, Old Dutch ōk, Old High German ouh, Old Norse auk, Gothic 𐌰𐌿𐌺 (auk).
Pronunciation[edit]
Adverb[edit]
ēac
- also, too
- late 10th century, Ælfric, "The First Sunday in September"
- Ġif wē gōd underfēngon of Godes handa, hwȳ ne sċule wē ēac yfel underfōn?
- If we’ve accepted good things from God’s hand, why shouldn’t we also accept bad things?
- Ġif wē gōd underfēngon of Godes handa, hwȳ ne sċule wē ēac yfel underfōn?
- c. 893 C.E., Alfred the Great (uncertain), transl., chapter IX, in Joseph Bosworth, editor, King Alfred’s Anglo-Saxon Version of The Compendious History of the World, London: Longman, translation of Historiae Adversus Paganos by Orosius, published 1859, book IV, page 92:
- […] án wæs on Ispania ; oþer on Mæcedonia ; þridde on Capadotia ; feorðe æt ham wið Hannibal ; and hí eac oftost geflymde wurdon, and gesbismrade.
- One was in Spain; another in Macedonia; a third in Cappadocia; a fourth at home against Hannibal; and they were also very often put to flight and disgraced.
- late 10th century, Ælfric, "The First Sunday in September"
Descendants[edit]
Preposition[edit]
ēac (with dative)