GLOSSARY. 



403 



Renhpian— co?«<. 



not fatty substances ; to render it, is to 

 make it homogeneous by melting. The 

 word may be a derivative of Hrein, 

 clean. Gejienbjnan is applied to elm- 

 rind, Lb. I. XXV. 2. ; to the black alder, 

 I. XV. 4. 



Rengpyjim, Ren-p., RsEng-p. Sec j^yjnn. 



Rib, neut., a rib. Lb. II. xlvi. S.S. 

 p. 198, U. 



Ribbe, gen. -an, fern. ? ribwort, plantago 

 lanceolata. lib. xxviii. Lb. 1. 11. 22. 



Ryben ; i> jieabe jiyben. Lb. III. xlviii. 



Rinb, gen. — e, fem. ; rind, cortex. Lb. I. 

 xxxvili. 5, 6. ; II. Ixv. 2, and often. 

 Horn. II. 8 and 114. Lyes quotation 

 ■was false. Lb. I. xlv. 5, and the more 

 recent deduction from him. 



Ri)'oba, rheum, pivfxaTiafj.6s, a flowing. 

 Lb. lix. 7. .S'ee Brem. Worth, p. 502. 4. 



Rop, masc, gen. jioppes, the colon, tvide 

 inteatine. Lb. II. xxxi. often. 



Ror, neut., scum, spuma, reiecfamentum. 

 Lb. II. XX. as Hpot. 



Rube, fem., gen. -an, rue, Hutu graveo- 

 Icns. Foreign, but adopted. J7ilbe 

 juibe, Lb. I. ii. 1, Is foreign, but a 

 garden herb, Peganum harmala. 



Rubraohn, read Rubniohn, Lb. III. Iviii., 

 a Norse word signifying Bed stalked, 

 from jio'S, red, nioll stalk. It is said, to 

 grow by running water ; and it is Poly- 

 gonum hydropiper, called Redshanks or 

 Water pepper in Bailey's dictionary. 



Run, gen. -e, secret, heathen mystery, 

 arcanum quid,'Byr. 363. 



Leob pune, gen. -an, fem., the sanic, 

 idem. Lb. I. Ixiv. 



s. 



Sse)>e]iie, Su^ejiige, fem., gen. -an, savory, 

 safureia hortensis. The interpretation, 

 " Satirlon," Gl. Somn., p. 64 b, 16, is 

 an evident error. Savory is in England 

 a garden plant, and retains its foreign 



Saej^epie — conf, 

 name. All the orcliis tribe are " bal- 

 " loc " worts. Lb. III. xii. 2. 



Sajj, gen. -es, neut. everywhere : See ace. 

 Sapan, Lb. II. xxviii. It is also, as 

 Sio sap, sometimes put for Sio sojih ; 

 Bw. 49, 29. So G.D. 201 b. C.E. 134, 

 line 23. 



Sajicjien, disposed to soreness. Lb. II. 1. 1. 

 There is no corresponding word in 

 the Hellenic text ; this Is epexegetical, 

 and must be interpreted accordingly. 



Scapu, fem., gen. -e, the share, that is, 

 the puhes. Lb. II. xxxi, xxxii. It is a 

 word well known to those who have 

 heard pure English spoken, and is neither 

 " Ilium " nor " Penis " nor " Alvus," 

 but something near each of those. The 

 books generally make a confusion, but 

 Sharebone is always, I think, Os pubis. 

 See a quotation in Halliwell, but strike 

 out " of a man." Compare also Peuil, 

 pubes, with Penul, a schare, in Garlande 

 and Biblesworth, p. 121, p. 148. 



Sceaban, prset. Sceab, p. part. Sceaben, to 

 shed, let fall ; also intransitively fall ; 

 i?ifundere, inspergere. Lb. I. ii. 23. ; 

 L Ixi. 2.; ILiii. Hb. ii. 6. Cf. Lye, 

 Sceban. iEj-ceba, migma, Gl. in Lye, 

 which is doubtless to be imderstood 

 as the substantive of 'ATroixvTTfaBas, 

 Emungi. 



Sceapen, adj., of sheep, ovimis. Lb. I. Iviil. 



Scea)X);lian, to scrape, radere. lib. Ixxxi. 

 5. The L Is frequentative. 



f Sceajipan, prget. f Sceapp, scrape, es- 

 pecially scrape herbs fine. Gej-ceapp, 

 lib. Ivii. 1. The same in substance as 

 Sceajipan, Hb. 1. 2. 



Sceajipe, fem., gen. -an, a scarification, 

 incisura in cute. Lb. I. Ivl.; I. xxxv. 



Sceappian, to scarify, in. superficie ccedere. 

 Lb. I. xxxii. 2. 



Sceopjran, to scarify, rodere, mordcre. 

 Scypf'5, Scyjiyenbiun, Lb. I. xvlli. pa. 

 gaepj-ci^af T J^a pyptjiuraan fceojifenbe 

 paepon, O.T. 270, line 32, began gnawing 

 the grass sprouts and the roots. 



c c 2 



