alength

Etymology
From.

Adverb

 * 1) At full length; lengthwise
 * 2) * 13th c.,, Historia destructionis Troiae, Page 154
 * "enm"

- Þen gone forthe the grekes, graithet engynes, Batold hom all abrode vmbe the bare walles; Layn ladders alenght & oloft wonnen.


 * 1) * 14th c.,, Troy Book: Book 3, 5115-6
 * "enm"

- For lost she had bothe myght and strengthe, And plat she fil to the grounde alengthe


 * 1) * 1550, Thomas Nicolls (Translator),, The hystory writtone by Thucidides the Athenyan of the warre, whiche was betwene the Peloponesians and the Athenyans, Book 4, pg. Cxviii
 * "enm"

- [They] fa∣stened yt wyth yrone at bothe endes. And also alengthe [...] and to one of the endes they fastened wyth chaynes of yronne a greate cawdrone of brasse


 * 1) For the whole length of
 * 2) * c. September 1306, Unknown composer, Song on the Execution of Sir Simon Fraser, (as given in 1885, Thomas Wright, The Political Songs of England: From the Reign of John to that of Edward II, pg. 65) 46-8
 * "enm"

- Ne be he ner so stout, ȝet he bith y-soht out o brede and o leynthe.


 * 1) Far-off
 * 2) * 1884,, Rev. H. R. Baramley (Editor), The Paslter or Psalms of David and Certain Canticles With a Translation and Exposition in English, pg. 140, 12.
 * "enm"

- And thai that ware biside me stode olenght: and fors thai made that sought my sale