on ecnesse
Old English
Etymology
Literally "in eternity."
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /on ˈeːk.nes.se/
Synonyms
- ā and simle (“(for)ever and always”)
- ā simle (“(for)ever always, always (for)ever”)
- ā tō ealdre (“for all time, for evermore”)
- ǣfre on ealdre (“emphatic ever, forever”)
- ēce (“eternally, perpetually, evermore”)
- ēcelīċe (“eternally, perpetually, evermore”)
- ēċe tō ealdre (“for all time, for evermore”)
- on ealdre ǣfre (“emphatic ever, forever”)
- simle ēċe (“always forever (or evermore)”)
- tō wīdum fēore (“for all eternity”)
Derived terms
- simle on ēcnesse (“always forever, throughout eternity”)
Related terms
- ēċe (“eternal, perpetual, everlasting”)
- ēċelīċ (“eternal, perpetual, everlasting”)
References
- Joseph Bosworth and T. Northcote Toller (1898) “on ecnesse”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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