threschald
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Middle English[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
- threshold, threshald, threswald, thressald, thraswald, thryswald, treswald, thriswall, threshwell, threshell, thresschell, thraschell, thrashwall, thraschit
Etymology[edit]
Middle Scots variant of threschwolde, threscholde, from Old English þresċold, þerxold, þrexwold (“doorsill, entryway”), from Proto-Germanic *þreskudlaz, *þreskūþlijaz, *þreskwaþluz, from Proto-Germanic *þreskaną, *þreskwaną (“to thresh”), from Proto-Indo-European *terh₁- (“to rub, turn”).
Noun[edit]
threschald (plural threschalds) (Middle Scots)
- a threshold, sill
- the ingang or entrance to a house or building
- (figurative) the outsetting of something
Usage notes[edit]
Often used in the phrase dure (“door”) threschald.
Descendants[edit]
- Scots: thrashel
Further reading[edit]
- “threschald”, in The Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–present, →OCLC.