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Rate | Answer | Clue |
SAXON | Anglo-Saxon. | |
GE- | An Anglo-Saxon prefix. See Y-. | |
SPARTH | An Anglo-Saxon battle-ax, or halberd. | |
ATODDS | Anglo-Saxon holding Sweeney on bad terms | |
SAXONISM | An idiom of the Saxon or Anglo-Saxon language. | |
EARTHDRAKE | A mythical monster of the early Anglo-Saxon literature; a dragon. | |
STYCA | An anglo-Saxon copper coin of the lowest value, being worth half a farthing. | |
ANGLO-SAXONISM | The quality or sentiment of being Anglo-Saxon, or English in its ethnological sense. | |
ANGLO-SAXONDOM | The Anglo-Saxon domain (i. e., Great Britain and the United States, etc.); the Anglo-Saxon race. | |
FOLKS | In Anglo-Saxon times, the people of a group of townships or villages; a community; a tribe. | |
ENGLISH | Of or pertaining to England, or to its inhabitants, or to the present so-called Anglo-Saxon race. | |
ATHELING | An Anglo-Saxon prince or nobleman; esp., the heir apparent or a prince of the royal family. | |
WEAK | Pertaining to, or designating, a noun in Anglo-Saxon, etc., the stem of which ends in -n. See Strong, 19 (b). | |
SARUM USE | A liturgy, or use, put forth about 1087 by St. Osmund, bishop of Sarum, based on Anglo-Saxon and Norman customs. | |
DERIVE | To trace the origin, descent, or derivation of; to recognize transmission of; as, he derives this word from the Anglo-Saxon. | |
EDH | The name of the Anglo-Saxon letter /, capital form /. It is sounded as "English th in a similar word: //er, other, d//, doth." | |
MANCUS | An old Anglo Saxon coin both of gold and silver, and of variously estimated values. The silver mancus was equal to about one shilling of modern English money. | |
BRETWALDA | The official title applied to that one of the Anglo-Saxon chieftains who was chosen by the other chiefs to lead them in their warfare against the British tribes. | |
YE | An old method of printing the article the (AS. /e), the "y" being used in place of the Anglo-Saxon thorn (/). It is sometimes incorrectly pronounced ye. See The, and Thorn, n., 4. | |
MOOT | A meeting for discussion and deliberation; esp., a meeting of the people of a village or district, in Anglo-Saxon times, for the discussion and... | |
THORN | The name of the Anglo-Saxon letter /, capital form /. It was used to represent both of the sounds of English th, as in thin, then. So called be... | |
STRONG | Applied to forms in Anglo-Saxon, etc., which retain the old declensional endings. In the Teutonic languages the vowel stems have held the origi... | |
THANE | A dignitary under the Anglo-Saxons and Danes in England. Of these there were two orders, the king's thanes, who attended the kings in their cou... | |
AE | A diphthong in the Latin language; used also by the Saxon writers. It answers to the Gr. ai. The Anglo-Saxon short ae was generally replaced by... | |
AZYMOUS | Unleavened; unfermented. B () is the second letter of the English alphabet. (See Guide to Pronunciation, // 196, 220.) It is etymologically rel... |