410 



GLOSSARY. 



J7ebe, mad, furious, phreniticus, indeclin- 

 able in Hb. i. 25, in contents see var. 

 lect. ii. 21, contents iv. 10, xxxvii. 5, etc. 

 Lb. I. Ixix. 



]7esb]i8ebe, fera., gen. -an, properly " way- 

 " broad," but called waybread; 1. Plan- 

 tago maior; 2. )-eo pupe pegbjiBebe, 

 plantago media, it it hoary, hirsute, 

 lib. ii.. Lb. n. Ixv., etc. 



]7en5e, j^sense, f anje, neut, gen. -an, 

 cheek, Lucca; Matth. v. 39 ; Luke v. 29 ; 

 Lb. L i. 8, 10 ; III. xlvii. ; Horn. IL 180. 

 And him 'Sa pongan bjiice'S, S.S. 140. 



j7cnn, ]7en, a wen, masc, pi. pennas. Lb. 



I. Iviii, ; III. XXX. ; Lacn. 12. 

 J7enpy]ic, fem., gen. -e ; " wenwort," is of 



sorts: — 1. cluphc, or cloved ; Lb. I. Iviii., 



II. Ii. 3. 2. cneoehce, kneed ; id. I. Ixvi. 

 Wenwort must be so called from curing 

 ■wens ; for wens are good, says Salmon, 

 " Alexander, Archangel, Asarabacca, 

 " Celandine, Chickweed, Coriander, 

 " Crow foot, Cresses, Darnel, Endive, 

 " Figwort, Laser wort, Lentils, Melilot, 

 " Purslane, Thorowwax, Turnsole, 

 " Wound wort." Among these, for 1, 

 Eununculus ucris, as crow foot, Eanun- 

 culus Jicaria, as the lesser celandine, and 

 for 2, Darnel, Lolium temulentum, are the 

 most likely. 



j7ejimob, gen. -es, masc, wormwood, Arte- 

 misia absinthium. Lb. II. xxii., Ixv. 5 ; 



III. iii. 2, xxxi. 



Se ]ula j'ejxmob, Anthemis coiula ? Lb. 

 III. viii. 



]7ice, imjch elm, Ulmus mordana, occ. Lb. 1. 

 xxxvi. Declension and gender unas- 

 certained. 



p'lpel, raasc, a beetle. Lb. III. xviii. 



To]ib]iij:el, Scarabaus stercorarius, 

 Linn. Geotrupes, others Lb. III. xviii. It 

 feeds on and lays its eggs in dung. 



}7ilbe (with final vowel), wild, silvestris- 

 f ilbe apra. Gl. K. 21. (Lye inexact), 

 pilbe bap. Gl. It. 20. (Lye inexact). 

 ]7ilbe oxa. Gl. R. 19, which has also 

 pilbe cynnep hopp. 20. pilbe cyjijet. 



^ilbe — cont. 



Gl. E. 39, but pilb, 44. j7ilbe popig. 

 G1.R.41. Hpicpilbepinseapb. G1.R.39. 

 J7ilbe laccuce. Gl. R. 44. (Lye inexact). 

 filbe neep. Gl. R. 42 and 44. (Lye 

 inexact), yilbe prngejib. Gl. R. 39. 

 J7ilbe pyp. Gl. R. 11. (Lye inexact). 

 To some of Lyes quotations are attached 

 no references. j7ilbbeo)i is a compound, 

 sometimes written pilbeop, and the geni- 

 tive plural is pilbbeopa. The separate 

 words are found Nan pilbe beoji. Hom. 

 I. 486. )>apa'S pilbe mob. S.S. 168, 

 line 755, where mob is neuter. Lib. I. 

 xxxvii. 2. Probably more examples of 

 e dropped, than as above, may appear. 



Pylpen ? or -ne ? gen. -e, a she wolf, lupa. 

 Quad. ix. 7. Germ. Wolfinn. Cf. 

 Mynecenu. 



]7yllec8eppe, -cyjipe, fem., gen. -an, fenu- 

 greek, Trigonellafcenum grcecum, from Gl. 

 Brux. Gl. Dun. 



I^mbelpcjieaji, neut., gen. -ep, windle straw, 

 cynosurus cristalus. Lb. I. iii. 12. 

 Jamieson. Nemnich. The expression 

 " two edged " belongs perhaps to the 

 spike. But Mylne (Indigenous Botany) 

 did, and the author of the name, Par- 

 kinson, must have understood Agrostis 

 spica venti. 



j7ypm, masc, gen, -ep, any creeping thing, 

 ivorm, snake, dragon, mite, insect, acarus, 

 vermin. Lat. Vermis and Vermiculus. 

 So multipedae are " many foot wormes," 

 in Hollands Plinius. The numerous 

 worms mentioned in the Saxon text are 

 not all lumbrici. 



Anapyjim. See Ana. 

 ]'^iinb]ij]Mn, hand worm, perhaps trans- 

 lating Keipiai as if from Xelp. Keipiai 

 occurs as lumbrici lati in Actios, 492 e 

 Lb. I. 1. " Teredo, urcius, surio, Gl. in 

 Lye. Surio, or Sirio, which is the name 

 of the itch mite in many European lan- 

 guages, seems to me to be only Cirio 

 from x^'V > ^^^ ^t the same time an 

 error for Kfipia. The lumbricus latus is 

 l^ania solium or Bothriocefalos latus. 



