Wyrm
WiktionaryText
Noun
Etymology
From , from a suffixed form of . Cognate with Old Frisian , Old Saxon (Dutch ), Old High German (German ), Old Norse (Swedish ), Gothic . The IE root is also the source of Latin , Lithuanian , Old Russian вермие (vermije) ‘locusts, worms’, Ancient Greek (originally }).
Noun
(plural wyrmas)
- a serpent or snake
- quotations:
- "Me nædre beswac, fah wyrm þurh fægir word" (see references)
- quotations:
- a creeping insect, maggot, grub, or worm
- quotations:
- "Wyrm ðe boraþ treow termes vel teredo" (see references)
- quotations:
- a worm or a snake, in the figurative sense of something lowly or despicable
- quotations:
- "Ic eam wyrm (vermis) and nales mon" (see references)
- quotations: