uneaþe

Old English

Alternative forms

  • unēaðe

Etymology

From un- + ēaþe.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /unæːɑ̯θe/, [unæːɑ̯ðe]

Adverb

unēaþe

  1. barely, hardly
    Hēo wæs swā druncen þæt hēo unēaðe rihte gān meahte.
    She was so drunk, she could barely walk straight.
    Iċ hit mæġ unēaðe ġelīefan!
    I can hardly believe it!
    Unēaðe ǣniġ hlyste þām sprecan.
    Hardly anyone listened to the speaker.
    • c. 900, translation of Bede's Ecclesiastical History
      Se wer mihte unēaðe þurh hine selfne ārīsan oþþe gān.
      The man could barely get up or walk by himself.
    • c. 900, The Consolation of Philosophy
      Iċ wēne þēah þæt þū ne forstande nū ġīet hwæt iċ þē tō cweðe, for þām hit is wundorlīċ þæt iċ seċġan wille, and iċ hit mæġ unēaðe mid wordum āreċċan swā swā iċ wolde.
      I think though that you don’t yet understand what I’m telling you, because what I want to say is amazing, and I can hardly express it in words the way I would like to.
  2. not easily, with difficulty
  3. reluctantly, unwillingly

Adjective

unēaþe

  1. hard, difficult; not easy

Declension

Weak Strong
case singular plural case singular plural
m n f m n f m n f
nominative unēaþa unēaþe unēaþe unēaþan nom. unēaþe unēaþe unēaþu unēaþe unēaþu, -e unēaþa, -e
accusative unēaþan unēaþe unēaþan acc. unēaþne unēaþe unēaþe unēaþe unēaþu, -e unēaþa, -e
genitive unēaþan unēaþra, unēaþena gen. unēaþes unēaþes unēaþre unēaþra
dative unēaþan unēaþum dat. unēaþum unēaþum unēaþre unēaþum
instrumental unēaþe
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