Re: Wicked!
- From: LFS <laura@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 02 Jul 2006 19:22:52 +0100
John Briggs wrote:
LFS wrote:
Phil C. wrote:
The Lincolnshire Lay Subsidy of 1334 includes one Everard le Wikked
living in Stamford (Bredecroft).
<http://www.le.ac.uk/english/pot/lincbrad.html>
Cool name, huh? My dictionaries suggest that "wicked" is Middle
English perhaps from OE Inca, a wizard. But I wonder what nuances the
word carried in the C14th. Anyone got an OED handy?
Here's some of the OED entry - can't see anything about wizards,
though. Everard may just have been a bad lot.
You've just given the different meanings and illustrative quotations - what about the etymology?
Sorry, it got left out - still no wizards, though:
[ME. (13th cent.) wicked, wikked, app. f. WICK a., as wretched from wrecche WRETCH. The later wiked appears to be merely a graphic variant; forms with the lowered stem-vowel are of both types, wekked, weked.]
--
Laura
(emulate St. George for email)
.
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