mægen
Appearance
See also: Mägen
Middle English
[edit]Noun
[edit]mægen
- (Early Middle English) Alternative form of mayn
Old English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Germanic *maganą, *maginą, whence also Old Saxon megin, Old High German magan, megin, Old Norse magn, megin, megn. See also magan.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]mæġen n
- strength, power
- force, army
- "Gospel of Saint Luke", chapter 10, verse 19
- And nū ic sealde ēow ānweald tō tredenne ofer nǣddran. And snacan and ofer ǣlc fēondes mæġen. And nān þing ēow ne derað...
- And now I gave you power to tread over adders and snakes and over each fiends' force. And no thing harms you.
- "Gospel of Saint Luke", chapter 10, verse 19
- virtue, efficacy, efficiency
- (in compounds) very
- mæġenheard ― very hard
Declension
[edit]Declension of mæġen (strong a-stem)
Derived terms
[edit]Derived terms
- mæġenian (“to gain strength: establish, confirm”)
- mæġenlēaslīce (“feebly, impotently”)
- mæġenlēas (“powerless, feeble, helpless”)
- mæġenlēast (“weakness, feebleness, inability”)
- mæġenāgende (“mighty”)
- mæġenbyrþen (“huge burden”)
- mæġencorþor (“strong troop”)
- mæġencræft (“main force, great strength, might”)
- mæġencræftig (“mighty”)
- mæġencyning (“mighty king”)
- mæġendǣd (“mighty deed”)
- mæġenēaca (“increase in power, reinforcement, succour”)
- mæġenēacen (“mighty, vigorous, powerful”)
- mæġenearfoþe (“great misery or trial”)
- mæġenellen (“mighty valor”)
- mæġenfæst (“vigorous, strong, steadfast”)
- mæġenfolc (“a mighty company of folk, a might people”)
- mæġenfultum (“mighty help”)
- mæġenhēap (“powerful band”)
- mæġenheard (“very strong”)
- mæġenrǣs (“mighty onslaught”)
- mæġenrōf (“of great power, powerful”)
- mæġenscipe (“might, power”)
- mæġenspēd (“abundance of power, virtue”)
- mæġenstān (“huge stone”)
- mæġenstrang (“of great virtue or strength”)
- mæġenstrengu, mæġenstrengþu (“main strength, main force, great might”)
- mæġenþegn (“mighty minister”)
- mæġenþise (“violence, force”)
- mæġenþrēat (“mighty host”)
- mæġenþrymm (“power, might, greatness, glory; heavenly host: Christ: heaven”)
- mæġenþrymnes (“great glory, majesty”)
- mæġenweorc (“mighty work”)
- mæġenwīsa (“general”)
- mæġenwudu (“strong spear”)
- mæġenwundor (“striking wonder”)
- beadumæġen (“battle strength, force”)
- dēaþmæġen (“deadly band”)
- ealmæġen (“utmost effort”)
- eorlmæġen (“band of noble warriors”)
- eorþmæġen (“earthly power”)
- fīfmæġen (“magic power”)
- folcmæġen (“public force, folk power, people power, army”)
- fulmæġen (“great power, full power”)
- giestmæġen (“a force composed of guests”)
- godmæġen (“divine power, divinity”)
- handmæġen (“bodily strength, hand power”)
- hēahmæġen (“great force: power, virtue”)
- hellemæġen (“troop of hell”)
- heofonmæġen (“heavenly force”)
- heremæġen (“warlike force, multitude”)
- holmmæġen (“force of the waves”)
- hordmæġen (“abundance of wealth, riches, power of wealth”)
- innoþmæġen (“inner strength”)
- lēodmæġen (“might of the people, people power, host power, virtue”)
- lofmæġen (“abundance, greatness of praise, power of praise”)
- manmæġen (“troop, force, cohort”)
- nīedmæġen (“violence, compulsion by force”)
- ofermæġen (“overpowering might”)
- rǣdmæġen (“productive force, beneficial force”)
- sīþmæġen (“band of warriors”)
- stīþmæġen (“powerful force”)
- tōþmæġen (“strength of teeth or tusks”)
- þēodmæġen (“troop, host, a tribal force”)
Descendants
[edit]Categories:
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English nouns
- Early Middle English
- Old English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Old English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Old English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Old English lemmas
- Old English nouns
- Old English neuter nouns
- Old English terms with quotations
- Old English terms with usage examples
- Old English neuter a-stem nouns