wolven
See also: wölven
English
Etymology
From Middle English wolven, *wilven, *wulven, perhaps continuing Old English wylfen (“wolfish”), from Proto-West Germanic *wulfīn (“wolfish”), equivalent to wolf + -en. Piecewise doublet of lupine, wolf being a cognate of Latin lupus and -en being a doublet of -ine.
Adjective
wolven (comparative more wolven, superlative most wolven)
- Of or pertaining to wolves; wolflike; wolfish.
- 2004, Marilyn Mattie Brahen, Claiming Her:
- But the shepherd does protect the sheep from the wolf: therefore, few fall to feed the wolven cubs, the remaining sheep living long to rear more lambs and provide us with wool.
- 2009, Kate Douglas, Wolf Tales VIII:
- Not a very wolven gesture, but somehow apropos.
- 2011, Gill McKnight, Indigo Moon:
- “What I mean is, this marking you and hiding you away, it's very wolven. [...]"
West Frisian
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.