botl
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Probably representing an earlier *boþl, from Proto-West Germanic *bōþl, from Proto-Germanic *bōþlą, from an instrumental form of *būaną (“to dwell”). Compare Old Norse ból. More at suffix -eld.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /botl/
Noun
botl n (West Saxon)
- building
- house, dwelling
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
- ðā Drihten ārǣrde miċelne wind, and sē ġelǣhte ealne þone līġ, and ābǣr hine tō ðǣs cyninges botle, swā þæt him ne belǣfde nān þing unforburnen, and hē sylf earfoðlīċe þām fȳre ætbærst.
- The Lord rose up a great wind, and it caught all the flame, and bore it to the king's dwelling, so that nothing unburnt to him remained, and he himself escaped from the fire with difficulty.
- Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
Declension
Strong a-stem:
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | botl | botl |
| accusative | botl | botl |
| genitive | botles | botla |
| dative | botle | botlum |
Derived terms
Descendants
- Middle English: botel
- English: bottle (in placenames e.g. Walbottle, Shilbottle)
- Middle English: bold (from metathetic form bold)
- English: bold