heofon
Old English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *himinaz (“cloud cover, sky”), from Proto-Indo-European *kemen-, *ḱemen- (“sky, cloud”). Cognate with Old Saxon hevan, heƀan (“heaven”), Old Norse hifinn, himinn (“sky”), Gothic 𐌷𐌹𐌼𐌹𐌽𐍃 (himins, “heaven”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈheofon/, [ˈheovon]
Noun
heofon m
- the sky, the firmament, the heavens
- heaven, paradise
- 9th century, King Ælfred translating Boethius, De Consolatio Philosophiae, XI 24:
- Ic wat ðæt monegum men þuhte þæt he wære to hefonum ahæfen gif he ænigne dæl hæfde þara þinra gesælða þe þu nu giet hæfst.
- 9th century, King Ælfred translating Boethius, De Consolatio Philosophiae, XI 24:
- the power of heaven
Declension
Declension of heofon (strong a-stem)
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | heofon | heofonas |
| accusative | heofon | heofonas |
| genitive | heofones | heofona |
| dative | heofone | heofonum |
Quotations
- 9th century, King Ælfred translating Boethius, De Consolatio Philosophiae, XXXV 98:
- [Ðu ge]herdest oft reccan...þætte Iob Saturnes [sunu sceo]lde bion se hehsta god of[er ealle oðre] godu, & he sceolde bion þæs heo[fenes] sunu, & sceolde ricsian on heo[fenum].
- c. 1000, Beowulf, 1571–2:
- 10th century, Cynewulf, Elene, 1229–1230:
Derived terms
Descendants
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