Crecas

Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Ultimately from Latin graecī (the Greeks).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈkreː.kɑs/, [ˈkreː.kɑs]

Proper noun

Crēcas m pl

  1. the Greeks
    • c. 900, translation of Bede's Ecclesiastical History
      Þā hē ārīsende wæs, þā ġefēlde hē his līchaman healfne dǣl mid þǣre ādle ġeslæġen bēon þe Crēcas nemnaþ paralysis and wē cweðaþ lyftādl.
      As he was getting up, he felt half his body being struck with the affliction that the Greeks call paralysis and we call "air sickness."
  2. by extension Greece
    • c. 900, the Old English Orosius
      On þām dagum wæs Alexander ġeboren on Crēcum.
      At that time, Alexander was born in Greece.
    • c. 900, the Old English Orosius
      Þȳ ilcan ġēare Claudius oferwann Gotan and hīe ādrāf ūt of Crēcum.
      The same year, Claudius defeated the Goths and drove them out of Greece.
    • c. 900, the Old English Orosius
      Binnan fīf and twēntiġ ġēarum Philippus ġeēode ealle þā cynerīċu þe on Crēcum wǣron.
      Within twenty-five years, Phillip conquered all the kingdoms in Greece.
    • c. 900, the Old English Orosius
      Æfter þām Fulvius se consul fōr mid fierde on Crēcas, tō þām beorge þe man Olympus hǣtt.
      After that, consul Fulvius went with an army to Greece, to the mountain that is called Olympus.

Declension

Derived terms

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