[aloignour] (c.1292)

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[aloignour] (c.1292)

[gdw]

  FEW:  longe 5,405a Gdf:  alloynour 1,226a GdfC: TL: DEAF:  loing (aloigneor)  DMF: TLF: OED: MED: DMLBS:
aloigneur,  aloygneour  

Derivatives of the adjectives lung (‘long’, from Latin longus) and luin (‘far’, from Latin longe – with the adverbial form producing a diphthongization of the root vowel) are separated on etymological and semantic grounds. However, the overlap of spelling variants (with or wihtout the diphthonization) between the two groups suggests no firm distinction between them.

s.

1laweloiner, one who illegally removes, misappropriates goods
( c.1292; MS: c.1300 )  adunc voloms nous qe si nos Justices pusent atteyndre la malice en le esloigner (var. (M: s.xivin) le aloigneur), qe les esloigneours soint puniz par prisoun  i 67 (var.)
( c.1292; MS: c.1300 ) les aloygneours soint mis par meynprise jekes en heyre des justices  i 67
aloignance#1  aloigne#1  aloignement  aloigner#1  loignour  luin 
This is an AND2 Phase 7 entry (V and A-Z consolidation). © 2025-29 The Anglo-Norman Dictionary. All rights reserved. Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council of the United Kingdom.
aloignour