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Definition 2024
Sele
sele
sele
English
Noun
sele (plural seles)
- (obsolete or dialectal) Happiness, fortune.
- (obsolete or dialectal) The right time or occasion for something, an opportune moment.
- greeting, salutation
- 1897, William Morris, “Chapter XIV. The Black Knight Tells the Truth of Himself”, in The Water of the Wondrous Isles (Fantasy), Project Gutenberg, published 2005:
- When the morning was come ... so she arose and thrust her grief back into her heart, and gave her fellow-farer the sele of the day, ...
Anagrams
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɛlɛ/
- Rhymes: -ɛlɛ
- Hyphenation: se‧le
Noun
sele n
Declension
Declension of sele
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *saliz, from Proto-Indo-European *sel-. Cognate with Old Saxon seli,', Old High German sali, Old Norse salr (Swedish sal), Lombardic sala; and with Old Church Slavonic (and Russian) село (selo). There was also a Germanic variant *saloz-, Old English sæl (“great hall, (large) house, castle”).
Pronunciation
Noun
sele m (nominative plural selas)
- great hall, house, dwelling, prison
- Winter ýþe beleác ísgebinde óþ ðæt óðer com geár in geardas swá nú gyt déþ ða ðe sele bewitiaþ wuldortorhtan weder. — Winter locks the waves with bonds of ice until another year came to the dwellings of those who keep a constant watch for good weather. Beowulf
- tabernacle, gesele
Derived terms
- bānsele m — body (bone-house)
- bēagsel n, bēagsele m — hall in which rings are distributed
- bēorsele m — beer-hall, banqueting hall
- burgsele m — castle-hall, house
- burnsele m — bath-house
- dēaþsele m — death-hall, ****
- drēorsele m — dreary hall
- dryhtsele m — princely hall
- eorþsele m — cave-dwelling
- gesele m — tabernacle
- goldsele m — hall in which gold is distributed
- gæstsele m — guest-hall
- grundsele m — abysmal dwelling
- gūþsele m — hall of warriors
- hēahsele m — high hall
- hornsele m — house with gables
- hringsele m — hall in which rings are bestowed
- hrōfsele m — roofed hall
- nīþsele m — hall of conflict
- seledrēam m — hall-joy, festivity
- seleful n — hall-goblet
- selegesceot, selescot n — tabernaculum, tent, lodging-place, nest; Ger. Geschoss
- selegyst m — hall-guest
- selerǣdend m — hall ruler or possessor
- selerest f — bed in hall
- selesecg m — retainer
- seleþegn m — hall-thane, retainer, attendant
- seleweard m — hall-warden
- þacsele, þæcsele m — a building with a thatched roof
- willsele m — pleasant dwelling
- wyrmsele m — hall of serpents, ****
References
- 1916, John R. Clark, "A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary for the Use of Students", sele et al.
- Bosworth, J. (2010, March 21). An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online (T. N. Toller & Others, Eds.), sele