c1205 Lay. 19433He..letten beoden uerde ȝeond al his *kine-ærde . [ c 1275 kine-erþe]
c1000 Andreas 566 ( Gr. )Synniᵹe ne mihton oncnawan þæt *cynebearn.
c1200 Trin. Coll. Hom. 47Seinte Marie..bar hire holie cunebern.
a1240 Wohunge in Cott. Hom. 273Kine bearn..of dauiðes kin.
c1205 Lay. 9693Þus seide þe king,..þer he sæt..an his *kine-benche.
c1000 ælfric Lives Saints ii. 326Þa wæs on rome byriᵹ sum *cyne-boren mæden.
c1205 Lay. 22142Þer come þreo ibroðeren, þe weore kiniborne.
a1225 Leg. Kath. 1882Under þis, come þe þurs Maxence..aȝein to his *kineburh.
c1275 *Kine-erþe . [ see kine-ærd]
971 Blickl. Hom. 23Þa wundan beaᵹ of þornum & hine setton on heafod for *cynehelme.
c1205 Lay. 6766He his kinehelm on-feng.
Ibid. 18158Nim þu þene kinehalm.
c1000 in Kemble Cod. Dipl. IV. 266Þurh hæse his *cynehlafordes æðelredes cynges.
c1205 Lay. 2501For Locrines lufe, þe wes hire kine louerd.
Ibid. 9831Þu ært me swa leof swa mi kine-lauerd.
c900 tr. Bæda'sHist. iv. xxvi. (1890) 358 [ i] Seo *cynelice fæmne ælflæd.
c1205 Lay. 14130Bi-tache me ænne castel oðer ane kineliche burh.
Ibid. 183He wes king & heo quen, & *kine-lond heo welden.
Ibid. 2523Heo ȝef Madan an hond Al his fader kine-lond.
a1225 Leg. Kath. 399And tu schalt..to curt cumen seoðen, and *kinemede ikepen.
c1300 Havelok 604 On his rith shuldre a *kyne merk.
a1225 Leg. Kath. 1979And te king heold ta. hise *kinemotes.
Ibid. 409He..sende iseelede writes wið his ahne *kinering.
c1200 Ormin 2224 Þatt illke *kinesæte þatt Daviþþ kinng hiss faderr held.
a1240 Ureisun in Cott. Hom. 193Þu ham ȝiuest *kinescrud, beies, and gold ringes.
c893 K. ælfred Oros. iii. vii. §6Þæt hehste *cynesetl and heafod ealles eastrices.
a1225 Leg. Kath. 45He set o kine setle.
a900 Cynewulf Crist 1217 (Gr. )Þonne Crist siteð on his *cynestole.
c1205 Lay. 4517Stille he wes iswoȝen On his kine-stole.
Ibid. 22300Arður letten beoden ȝeond al his *kine-þeoden.
c1275 Ibid. 11026Þat he..his *kineworþe lond Sette Custance an hond.
c1320 Cast. Love 14 Worschupe him..Þat kineworþe kyng vs aboue. [ is]
a1225 Juliana 62 Þus þu..of þe þreo kinges were *kinewurðliche iwurȝet.
c1000 ælfric Hom. II. 502Hi to þæs caseres *cyne-ᵹyrde ᵹebuᵹon.
c1200 Ormin 8182 And himm wass sett inn hiss rihht hannd An dere kineȝerrde.
1306 Sir Simon Fraser in Pol. Songs (Camden) 215Hii..token him a kyne-ȝerde, so me kyng sholde, to deme.
1899 Daily Chron. 31 Aug. 3/2The British Museum authorities have made arrangements for the safe custody of kinenegatives dealing with events of national importance.
1923 Chambers's Jrnl. 603/2The kinegraph registers the short intake of the breath marking his embarrassment.
1927 Bulletin 12 Aug. 14/2 An enthusiast for the kine camera.
1928 Daily Express 28 Mar. 13 He has turned the music-hall into a home of kine-variety.
1959 Listener 3 Sept. 356/2 Kine-recordings are used in large numbers to help distribution.
kine-
— see kin-
— see kin-
kine- 1
Prefix
- Combining form denoting movement. Alternate form, cine-.
Etymology
From New Latin, from Ancient Greek κῑνέω (kīnéō, “to move”).
Derived terms
Related terms
kine- 2
Prefix
- obsolete, no longer productive Prefix occurring in words signifying royalty or kingship.
Etymology
From Middle English kyne-, from Old English cyne- (“royal, kingly”), from Proto-Germanic *kuni-, *kuniz (“offspring, generation, race”), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵene-, *ǵnē- (“to give birth, be born”). More at kin, kind.
Derived terms
English words prefixed with kine-