sulung
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
See also: Sulung
English[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Learned borrowing from Old English sulung, from sulh (“plough, ploughland”).
Noun[edit]
sulung (plural sulungs)
- (historical) A unit of land in medieval Kent, comparable to the hide and the carucate.
- 2000, Nicholas Brooks, Anglo-Saxon Myths: State and Church, 400–1066, →ISBN, page 57:
- The counting of sulungs (as of hides) is a horrible task on which no two scholars agree, and it is not surprising that before the age of the computer Jolliffe made slips and that his desire to find eighty-sulung units sometimes overrode the evidence or the geographical probabilities.
Translations[edit]
unit of land
|
Indonesian[edit]
Noun[edit]
sulung
Kapampangan[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Verb[edit]
sulung
- to advance
Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Old English
- English learned borrowings from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with historical senses
- English terms with quotations
- en:Units of measure
- Indonesian lemmas
- Indonesian nouns
- Kapampangan lemmas
- Kapampangan verbs