GLOSSARY. 



405 



Sisj-once, a wort, herba quaidam ignota. 



Lb. I. xxxi. 7. 

 Sme)>e, ever easy ; j-in-ehju', Lb. II. xlvi. 

 Sinjulle, gen. -an, Iiouselcck, Scrnpcrvlvum 

 tectorum. The syllabic sm like sera in 

 Semper, means always; as also in Sm- 

 Sjiene. Smj-ulle is Sempervivum, Hb. 

 ex XV. That herb is drawn in MS. V., 

 explained, as the green pigment has 

 left only the external cast in the vellum, 

 by MS. A., and in MS. G., where it is 

 glossed " hufwurc," that is, Ilauswurz, 

 and in MS. T. These all point the same 

 way. Singreen seems only a more generic 

 tcmi, in later times, but " The mickle 

 " sinfulle," Lb. II. xxxiv., shows that 

 this term also in early times would in- 

 clude Sedums, as S. Telephium, Lb. I. 

 iii. 11. 



Sm^jiene, fern., gen. -an, siiujreen, any 

 sort of Sedum, with sempervivum tecto- 

 rum, literally always green. Hb. Ixxxvi. 

 " Sedo magno, Ilouseleeke or Sen- 

 " greene," Florio. " Joubarbe, House- 

 " leek, Sengreen, Aygreen, etc." Cot- 

 grave. In Hb. xlix. = Temolus, that is, 

 Moly, the Homei'ic fxUXv, a garlic, Allium 

 moly. In Dansk. the evergreen periwinkle, 

 Vinca. pa. j-malan pngjienan, Lb. I. 

 viii. 2, shows that Singreen was a gene- 

 ric name. " Colatidis," also " Temolus 

 " vel titemallos," Gl. Dun. " Temolus," 

 Hb. xlix., saying the root is bulbous, 

 drawing it large, and with leaves and 

 stem in MS. V., like Pinguicula vulgaris 

 (II.), with no resemblance to Vinca. 



Smtjiaenbel, masc. ? a bolus, "■ tiirundula," 

 Lat. Hb. xiv. 2. Sm, as in Smepealc, 

 round; T]ienbel has a masc. termina- 

 tion. 



Slajiie ? gen. -an. Salvia sclareu. Lb. I. 

 XV. 5. 



Slecgecan, palpitate with strong beats, Lb. 

 II. xxvii ; from Slecse, a sledge hammer, 

 and the fre(iucntative termination -ecan, 

 -etcan. 



Slype ? gen. -an, a viscid or sloppy sub- 

 stance. Masc. Lb. I. i. 6. Fem. Lacn. 



Slype — cnnt. 



40. Cf. Slipis. Of. Cu slyppan, Oxan 

 slyppan. 



Smegapyjim, Smoega -, Smea-, masc, gen 

 -ef. Lb. I. liii. ; III. xxxix., a worm or 

 insect that penetrates, that eats its way, a 

 Imrroiving insect; cf. Norse, Smjuga, 1. 

 irrepere, 2. penetrarc, E. Smut;an, to 



• creep, Smyj;elai-, cuniculi, conies or their 



burrows. Somn. Gl. M.M. 

 Smepoj'vjic, 1. Aristolochia rotunda, for- 

 eign, and A. c/e;wai/i!w,English. Hb. xx., 

 Lb. III. xlvii., with several glossaries 

 and MSS., Gl. Dun., Gl. Harl. 3388, Gl. 

 Sloane, 5. A. longa, Gl. Sloane, 405. 



2. Mercurialis, Gl. Kawl. C. 607. Gl. 

 Harl. 3388 in margin. G. de Bibles- 

 worth, p. 162. Gl. Sloane, T), fol. 34. 

 Gl. Sloane, 135. 



3. From the qualities, Pinguicula, 

 butterivort. 



Smican, to simidgc, illincre. Lb. I. xxxi. 3 ; 

 related to modern Smut ; in Lye Smitca. 



Snseb, fem. gen. -e, a bolus, a morsel, Lacn. 

 81. Lb. I. XV. 6 ; L Iii. 3 ; 11. Ixiv. ; 

 III. Ixii. p. 348 ; III. Ixv. Seo snaeh, 

 Horn. IL 272. S.S. p. 169, line 809. 

 But Sa snffibas, CD. 207. 



Soj;o'5a, gen. -an, corrupt humour, pituita 

 with hiccup, hicket, sobbing, Xvyixds, sin- 

 gultus, Hb. xc. 11 ; Lb. I. ii. 1 ; II. 

 xxxix., where the original is fiiTo. Se 

 ravra Av^ovnri. Alex. Trail, p. 480, ed. 

 Basil. From Sujan. 



JElj)-oj;o'iSa, elvish hiccup, the same 

 thing gone to a frightful extreme. Thus 

 Trdi/ra yap c-7roirj(ra Tavra Kal tizl /xeyaAov 

 \vyi.Lov -roaoiiTOV, ws vttovouv kKrhs K\iv7)s 

 ii^dWeadai rhv KaixvovTa. Alex. Trail, 

 p. 121, ed. Paris. = lib. vii. 15, in an 

 instance of so strong a hiccup that wc 

 supposed the patient ivas springing out 

 of bed. Lb. III. ixii. p. 348. 



Solo)-ece, Heliotropium Europceum. lib. 

 Ixxvi. Sprengel says that by Solse- 

 quium, Charlemagne understood lI.E. as 

 above. 



