Old English

edit

Etymology

edit

Unknown. Often derived in folk etymologies from ǣl (eel). Dowdy prefers a derivation from Elysium, while Miller prefers a Celtic/Brythonic origin such as helyg (willows) or heli (saltwater). More at Ely.

Proper noun

edit

Ēlīg

  1. Ely, a cathedral city in Cambridgeshire

Declension

edit

The dative form is usually endingless, being identical to the nominative singular as Ēlīg. Strong ō-stem:

singular plural
nominative Ēlīg
accusative Ēlīge
genitive Ēlīge
dative Ēlīge

References

edit
  • Miller, S H (1892). "Fenland notes and queries : a quarterly antiquarian journal for the fenland, in the counties of Huntingdon, Cambridge, Lincoln, Northampton, Norfolk, and Suffolk - Vol 2": 316.
  • Mansfield, Daniel (27 December 2012). "Cambridge academic has new theory on how Ely got its name". Ely Standard.

Further reading

edit
  NODES