stounde
Middle English
Noun
stounde
- Alternative form of stound: various spans of time.
- 2008 January 1 [circa 14th century AD], Geoffrey Chaucer, Walter William Skeat, editor, Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, volume 1, Cosimo, Inc.,, →ISBN, The Minor Poems, V. The Parlement of Foules, line 142, page 340:
- Thise vers of gold and blak y-writen were,
The whiche I gan a stounde to beholde,
For with that oon encresed ay my fere,
And with that other gan myn herte bolde ;
That oon me hette, that other did me colde,
No wit had I, for errour, for to chese,
To entre or flee, or me to save or lese.- (please add an English translation of this quote)
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Saterland Frisian
Etymology
From Old Frisian stonda, standa, from Proto-Germanic *standaną. More at stand.
Derived terms
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