
Authority Cited: Junius
Author name and dates: Francis Junius (1591-1667)
BKG Bio-tweet: Germanic and Anglo-Saxon philologer; pub. Anglo-Saxon manuscripts, glossary; Milton friend; SJ cites in etymologies, def.
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: about 70 Junius cites in 1755 Dict. vol. 1 word list (plus 9 in the Preface), 49 Junius cites in 1755 Dict. vol.2. No additional Junius cites were identified as added in the 1773 Dict.]
Etymologicum Anglicanum; per Yale, Vol. 18, e.g. pp. 81, 184. The full citation is: Junius, Franziskus. Francisci Junii Francisci filii Etymologicum Anglicum ex autogranho descripsit & accessionibus permultis auctum edidit Edwardus Lye A.M. Ecclesiae Parochialis de Yardley-Hastings in agro Northamptoniensi Rector. Praemittunter vita auctoris, et Grammatica Anglo-Saxonica. Oxonii, e Theatro Sheldoniano, 1743; addle; age; altar;. . . bachelor; badge; badger; . . . cates; cess; chime; . . . dance; danger; darrain; . . . fellow; fester; filbert; . . . gad; gasp; gaude; . . . hamper; harangue; hit; . . . inveigle; jeopardy; june; latic; leman; line; . . . march; mareschal; midwife; . . . nape; nonce; oak; orchard; parch; parlous; peevish; . . . quash; rafter; rakehel (rakehell in 1773 Dict.); scabbard; scrat; sillabub; . . . trigger; wanton; welaway; yeoman. [BKG Note: Posthumously published after 3/4 century by Edward Lye. Both Junius and J.J. Scaliger are cited for etymology by SJ from this work under pioneer. (Thanks to R. DeMaria, Jr. for pointing this out.) Yale vol. 18, p. 184 indicates this Junius work may be the source of etymologies for some Chaucer citations in the Dict. word list.]
Author name and dates: Francis Junius (1591-1667)
BKG Bio-tweet: Germanic and Anglo-Saxon philologer; pub. Anglo-Saxon manuscripts, glossary; Milton friend; SJ cites in etymologies, def.
Categories (list of works cited – preliminary) [BKG Note: about 70 Junius cites in 1755 Dict. vol. 1 word list (plus 9 in the Preface), 49 Junius cites in 1755 Dict. vol.2. No additional Junius cites were identified as added in the 1773 Dict.]
Etymologicum Anglicanum; per Yale, Vol. 18, e.g. pp. 81, 184. The full citation is: Junius, Franziskus. Francisci Junii Francisci filii Etymologicum Anglicum ex autogranho descripsit & accessionibus permultis auctum edidit Edwardus Lye A.M. Ecclesiae Parochialis de Yardley-Hastings in agro Northamptoniensi Rector. Praemittunter vita auctoris, et Grammatica Anglo-Saxonica. Oxonii, e Theatro Sheldoniano, 1743; addle; age; altar;. . . bachelor; badge; badger; . . . cates; cess; chime; . . . dance; danger; darrain; . . . fellow; fester; filbert; . . . gad; gasp; gaude; . . . hamper; harangue; hit; . . . inveigle; jeopardy; june; latic; leman; line; . . . march; mareschal; midwife; . . . nape; nonce; oak; orchard; parch; parlous; peevish; . . . quash; rafter; rakehel (rakehell in 1773 Dict.); scabbard; scrat; sillabub; . . . trigger; wanton; welaway; yeoman. [BKG Note: Posthumously published after 3/4 century by Edward Lye. Both Junius and J.J. Scaliger are cited for etymology by SJ from this work under pioneer. (Thanks to R. DeMaria, Jr. for pointing this out.) Yale vol. 18, p. 184 indicates this Junius work may be the source of etymologies for some Chaucer citations in the Dict. word list.]
- Junius (no work cited)