esne

English

Etymology

From Old English esne (a man of the servile class, a laborer, slave, servant, retainer, a youth, young man, man, scholar), from Proto-Germanic *asniz, *asunz (reward; day labourer), from Proto-Indo-European *os(e)n-, *es(e)n- (summer, harvest, harvest-time). Cognate with Middle Low German asne, asnen (wages, fixed income), Old High German asni (hireling, day labourer, servant), Gothic 𐌰𐍃𐌽𐌴𐌹𐍃 (asneis, a hireling, day labourer). Related to Old English earnian (to labor for, strive after, deserve as the reward of labor, merit, earn, win). More at earn.

Noun

esne (plural esnes)

  1. (Anglo-Saxon, historical) A hireling of servile status; slave.
    • 1818, Samuel Heywood, A dissertation upon the distinctions in society:
      To an esne, therefore, I refer the entry in Doomsday-book, that at Chester, if a male or female slave shall do any [...]
    • 1875, William Stubbs, The constitutional history of England, in its origin and development:
      [...] of British extraction captured or purchased, — or of the common German stock descended from the slaves of the first colonists: the esne or slave who works for hire; [...]
    • 2011, David Anthony Edgell Pelteret, Slavery in Early Mediaeval England:
      [...] insist that in the event of the death of an esne his full value had to be paid.

Anagrams


Basque

Etymology

From Proto-Basque *ezene

Noun

esne

  1. milk
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.