Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

English

edit

Etymology

edit
 
Illustrations of glaives (sense 2)[n 1]

From Middle English gleyve (lance, glaive),[1] from Old French glaive (lance; sword), from Late Latin glavus. The further etymology is uncertain; one possibility is that glavus reflects Latin gladius (sword) crossed with clāva (club); another is that it derives from a re-crossing of gladius with Proto-Celtic *kladiwos (sword); yet another is that it is a borrowing into Late Latin from Old Irish claideb. All of the aforementioned words derive ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kelh₂- (to beat; to break). The Oxford English Dictionary notes that none of these words had the oldest meaning of Old French glaive (“lance”). The English word is cognate with Middle Dutch glavie, glaye (lance); Middle High German glavîe, glævîn (lance), Swedish glaven (lance).[2]

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

glaive (plural glaives)

  1. (obsolete, historical) A light lance with a long, sharp-pointed head.
    • 1919, R[obert] Coltman Clephan, chapter II, in The Tournament: Its Periods and Phases, London: Methuen & Co., [], →OCLC, page 18:
      The lance, or glaive as it is often called, of the eleventh and twelfth centuries was quite straight and smooth; a vamplate was added in the fourteenth, small at first but larger later, for the protection of the right arm.
  2. (historical) A weapon consisting of a pole with a large blade fixed on the end, the edge of which is on the outside curve.
    • 1786, Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons, [], London: [] S. Hooper [], →OCLC, page 52:
      The Welch Glaive is a kind of bill, ſometimes reckoned among the pole axes. They were formerly much in uſe. [...] In the Britiſh Muſeum there is an entry of a warrant, granted to Nicholas Spicer, authoriſing him to impreſs ſmiths for making two thouſand Welch bills or glaives.
    • 1891, R[obert] H[enry] Codrington, “Arts of Life”, in The Melanesians: Studies in their Anthropology and Folk-lore, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Clarendon Press, →OCLC, page 305:
      With the spear comes the use of the shield; yet the San Cristoval spearmen use no such defence, but turn off spears thrown at them with long curved glaives, and the shields in use in Florida are not made in that island.
    • 1999, Tamora Pierce, First Test: A Tortall Legend (Protector of the Small; 1), New York, N.Y.: Ember, Random House Children’s Books, published 2018, →ISBN, page 22:
      At that moment Ilane swung the bladed staff—glaive, Kel remembered as it swung, they called it a glaive—in a wide side cut, slicing one pirate across the chest.
  3. (loosely or poetic, archaic) A sword, particularly a broadsword.
    • 1596, Edmund Spenser, “Book IV, Canto X”, in The Faerie Queene. [], part II (books IV–VI), London: [] [Richard Field] for William Ponsonby, →OCLC, stanza 19, page 144:
      [T]he glaiue which he did wield / He gan forthwith t'auale, and way vnto me yield.
    • c. 1596–1599, William Shakespear[e], “The Second Part of Henry IV. []”, in The Works of Mr. William Shakespear, volume III (Consisting of Historical Plays), Oxford, Oxfordshire: [] Clarendon-Press, published 1770, →OCLC, act IV, scene i, page 426:
      Wherefore do you ſo ill tranſlate yourſelf, / Out of the ſpeech of peace, that bears ſuch grace, / Into the harſh and boiſt'rous tongue of war? / Turning your books to glaives, your ink to blood, / Your pens to lances, and your tongue divine / To a loud trumpet, and a point of war?
      In the First Quarto (1600) of the play and in Shakespeare’s First Folio (1623), the word is rendered as graues (graves).
    • 1748, James Thomson, “Canto II”, in The Castle of Indolence: [], London: [] A[ndrew] Millar, [], →OCLC, stanza XXXIX, page 60:
      Juſtice were cruel weakly to relent; / From Mercy’s Self ſhe got her ſacred Glaive: / Grace be to thoſe who can, and will, repent; / But Penance long, and dreary, to the Slave, / Who muſt in Floods of Fire his groſs ſoul Spirit lave.
    • 1750, Allan Ramsay, “Hardyknute. A Fragment of an Old Heroic Ballad.”, in The Tea-table Miscellany: Or, A Collection of Choice Songs, Scots and English, [], 11th edition, volume I, London: [] A[ndrew] Millar, [], →OCLC, stanza XXI, page 215:
      Thus furth he drew his truſty glaive, / While thouſands all arround, / Drawn frae their ſheaths glanſt in the ſun, / And loud the bougills ſound.
    • a. 1908 (date written), Francis Thompson, “[Miscellaneous Odes.] Laus Amara Doloris”, in The Works of Francis Thompson, volume II (Poems), New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons [], published 1913, →OCLC, page 124:
      Yea, that same awful angel with the glaive / Which in disparadising orbit swept / Lintel and pilaster and architrave

Derived terms

edit
edit

Translations

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ From Wendelin Boeheim (1890) “Die Glese und die Couse”, in Handbuch der Waffenkunde. Das Waffenwesen in seiner historischen Entwicklung vom Beginn des Mittelalters bis zum Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts [Handbook of Weapon Knowledge. Weaponry in Its Historical Development from the Beginning of the Middle Ages to the End of the 18th Century.] (Seemanns kunstgewerbliche Handbücher; VII), Leipzig: E. A. Seemann, →OCLC, figure 396, pages 343–344.

References

edit
  1. ^ glaive, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  2. ^ glaive, n.”, in OED Online  , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 1899; glaive, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Further reading

edit

Anagrams

edit

French

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Old French glaive, from Late Latin glavus; see the entry for English glaive for further information.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

glaive m (plural glaives)

  1. gladius, short sword
  2. (figuratively) sword

Further reading

edit

Middle English

edit

Noun

edit

glaive

  1. Alternative form of gleyve

Old French

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Late Latin glavus, representing a hybrid of gladius and clāva (club). Alternatively, from an original *glede (from Latin gladius) with influence from Gaulish gladebo (sword). Both terms are ultimately from Proto-Celtic *kladiwos (sword). Alternatively, the d in *glede that had come to be pronounced as /ð/ in Old French may have been fronted to /v/ (perhaps influenced by the Gaulish word). Gender was variable in the oldest texts.

Noun

edit

glaive oblique singularm or f (oblique plural glaives, nominative singular glaives, nominative plural glaive)

  1. lance
  2. sword
  3. massacre

Descendants

edit

See also

edit

References

edit