lic

Etymology
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) dead body, corpse
 * 2) (rare outside of poetry) body (living or dead)
 * 3) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Saint Augustine's Soliloquies
 * "ang"
 * "ang"

- Hū, ne sæġde iċ ǣr þæt sē þe bær līċ ġefrēdan wolde, þæt hē hit sċolde mid barum handum ġefrēdan?


 * 1) form

Usage notes

 * was the general word for "body" in (as still in Gothic), but by the time of written, līċ has come to mean a dead body specifically, and the general word for "body" is.
 * The older sense “body (living or dead)” is preserved mainly in poetry and in certain compounds such as (“pore,” literally “body pipe”). Some other compounds even preserve the yet older sense “form,” otherwise totally obsolete:  (“bore figure,” e.g. a boar crest on a helmet). See also the derived terms  →   and  →, which both originally meant “formed” or “shaped” at some point in Proto-Germanic.

Derived terms

 * (adjective-forming suffix: “-y, -ly, -like”)
 * (“to please,” impersonal: “to like”)
 * (“to please,” impersonal: “to like”)
 * (“to please,” impersonal: “to like”)

Etymology
.

Noun

 * 1)  bachelor