wyrt

Etymology 1
From, from , the oblique stem of (whence ).

Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) plant
 * 2) * c. 992, Ælfric, "The 16th Sunday After Pentecost"
 * "ang"

- Wyrta sind īeðelīca ġesċeafta and þurh winterlīcne ċiele simle forsēariaþ.


 * 1) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Boethius' 
 * "ang"

- Sumra wyrta oþþe sumes wuda eard biþ on dūnum, sumra on merscum, sumra on mōrum, sumra on clūdum, sumra on barum sandum.


 * 1) * late 9th century, King Alfred's translation of Saint Augustine's Soliloquies
 * "ang"

- Æppla, græs, and wyrta, and treowu forealdiaþ and forsēariaþ, and ōðru cumaþ, grēnu weaxaþ, and ġierwaþ and rīpaþ, for þæt hīe eft onġinnaþ sēarian.


 * 1) vegetable
 * 2) * c. 995, Ælfric, Extracts on Grammar in English
 * "ang"

- Holus: "wyrt."


 * 1) * early 11th century, anonymous of Ælfric's  Colloquy (c. 995)
 * "ang"

- "Hwæt māre itst þū?" "Wyrta and ǣġru, fisċ and ċīese, buteran and bēana."


 * 1) * early 11th century, anonymous of Ælfric's  Colloquy (c. 995)
 * "ang"

- Ġif ġē mē ūt ādrīfaþ fram ēowrum ġefērsċipe, ġē etaþ ēowre wyrta grēne and ēowre flǣsċmetas hrēawe.


 * 1) * unknown date and author, monastic sign language guide
 * "ang"

- Ġesodenra wyrta tācn is þæt þū dō mid þīnre ōðerre handa niðewearde be þǣre sīdan swelċe þū sċearfian wille. Þonne þū grēne wyrta habban wille, þonne sete þū þīnne finger on þīne winestran hand.


 * 1) herb, spice
 * 2) * c. 992, Ælfric, "On the Dedication of a Church"
 * "ang"

- Hire olfendas bǣron sūðerne wyrta, and dīerwierðe ġimmas, and unġerīm goldes.


 * , "Palm Sunday"
 * "ang"

- Marīa ġenam ān pund dīerwierðre smierenesse and smierede mid þæs Hǣlendes fēt and mid hire loccum drȳġde. Þā wæs eall þæt hūs ġefylled mid þon swētan stenċe. Þēos smierenes wæs ġeworht of eahtatīene cynna wyrtum.


 * 1)  root of a plant
 * 2) * c. 950–1050. Anonymous, "'", in, ll. 497–499. Reprinted in 2013', Bintley, Michael D. J.; Shapland, Michael G. (eds.), Trees and Timber in the Anglo-Saxon World'', Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-968079-5, p. 219. Translation from the same.
 * Þuhte him þæt on foldan | fægre stode / wudubeam wlitig, | se wæs wyrtum fæst, / beorht on blædum.
 * It seemed to him that there stood, fair upon the earth, a peerless tree that was steadfast in its roots and bright in its fruits.
 * 1) * 975–1025 (date of MS). Anonymous, ', in the . Translated and reprinted in 1999'. (trans.), Beowulf: A New Verse Translation'', New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, ISBN 0-374-11119-7, pp. 94–95, l. 1364.
 * wudu wyrtum fæst | wæter oferhelmað
 * Woods secured by roots cover over the water

Descendants

 * (attested in plural )
 * (attested in plural )
 * (attested in plural )

Etymology 2
From a merger of and. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  as in brewing