hellegeat

Old English

Alternative forms

  • hellegatu, hellegata, hellegate, hellegætu

Etymology

From hell + geat

Noun

hellegeat n

  1. gate of hell
    on þam sylfum fæce þe se mennisca lichama on byrgene læg, he abræc þurh his godcundan mihte hellegeata in your own time that saw the human body laying in the tomb, he broke through the gates of hell with his divine might.
  2. evil, false doctrine
    leahtras & dwollic lar sind hellegatu for þan ðe hi lædað þone synfullan swilce þurh get into hellewite vice & heretical learning are hell-gates for that it lead to that sinful manner through which goes into hell-wite.

References

  • 1916, John R. Clark, "A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary for the Use of Students'
  • Bosworth, J. (2010, March 21). An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary Online (T. N. Toller & Others, Eds.)
  • 2011, The Dictionary of Old English, University of Toronto
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