inn-
Morphological Analysis
Wordclass: Prefix
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594 of the Main Volume of the paper dictionary.
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Cite the scanned version of the original dicionary like this:- Bosworth, Joseph. "inn-." An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary: Based on the Manuscript Collections of the Late Joseph Bosworth. Ed. Thomas Northcote Toller. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1898. 594.
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inn
a lodging, & c. Add :-- Hí gelógodon his bæd on þæs mynstres sprǽchúse . . . þ̵ inn wæs swýþe nearo, Hml. S. 31, 856. His healle oððe innes ipsius tabernaculi, R. Ben. I. 4, 2. Týnum and twéntigum on ánum inne ætgædere hí restan . . . Leóht on ðǽm selfum inne (cella) byrne, R. Ben. 47, 7. Se Gota gewennde tó his inne (húse, v.l.) Gothus ad hospitium reversus, Gr. D. 81, 15. Án lang gealga stænt æt Amanes inne lignum stat in domo Aman, Hml. A. 100, 280. Hí heom in gecuron mid hyra méder, Hml. S. 30, 317.
inn
; adv. Add: , ing [cf. (?) ingang where other MSS. have innan, Chr. 1016; P. 147, 19]. Of motion or direction, inwards :-- Inn introrsum, Wrt. Voc. ii. 44, 18. Móyses oft eóde inn (in, v. l.) and út on ðæt templ. Past. 101, 24. Nán mann ne mihte ne inn (ing, v. l.) ne út, Chr. 1016; P. 149, 6. Se ingang is eástan in, Shrn. 69, 3. Be cumbe ing on holan bróc; þ̵ andlang streámes ing on hlósmoc, C. D. iii. 412, 24. Ing tó ealdan mynstre, Che. E. 185, 7. Hé tihð his fét suá hé inmest mæg, Past. 241, 12.