manred
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English manred, manrede, from Old English manrǣden (“dependence, homage, service, tribute, due”), equivalent to man + -red.
Noun
manred (countable and uncountable, plural manreds)
- (Britain dialectal or obsolete) Homage.
- (Britain dialectal or obsolete) Vassals collectively; the supply of men a lord can call upon in time of warfare.
- (Britain dialectal or obsolete) The position of leader among fighting men; the conduct (of an army).
- (rare, Britain dialectal or obsolete) Carnal intercourse.
- (Britain dialectal, Scotland) The solemn undertaking to be one's faithful supporter, and the obligation so constituted.
Noun
manred (uncountable)
- (mythology) primal substance of the Universe
- 2003, Kennth Morris, “Druidism”, in G. De Purucker, editor, Theosophical Path Magazine, January to June 1930, Kessinger Publishing, →ISBN, page 131:
- They were made of the manred, that is, of the elements in the extremities of their particles and smallest atom … God was in each of the particles of the manred, ...
- 2004, Lewis Spence, “The Celtic Idea of the Origin of Man”, in An Introduction to Mythology, Cosimo, Inc, →ISBN, page 169:
- God pronounce his ineffable name, and Manred, the primal substance of the Universe, was formed. Manred was composed of thousands of teeming atoms in each of which God was present, and each was part of God.
-
Middle English
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.