Heroe vs Herye - What's the difference?
heroe | herye |
(obsolete) To honour, praise or celebrate.
* (editor), Alexander Chalmers (additional lives), ''The Works of the English Poets, from Chaucer to Cowper , Volume 1,
* 14thC , '', 2002, Marion Wynne-Davies (editor), ''The Tales of The Clerk and The Wife of Bath ,
* 14thC , William de Shoreham, 1851, Early English Poetry, Ballads and Popular Literature of the Middle Ages , Volume 28, Percy Society,
* 1563 , , Volume 1,
* 1579 , : November'', 2012, Marie Loughlin, Sandra Bell, Patricia Brace (editors), ''The Broadview Anthology of Sixteenth-Century Poetry and Prose ,
As a noun heroe
is obsolete form of lang=en.As a verb herye is
to honour, praise or celebrate.herye
English
Alternative forms
* (l)Verb
page 251,
- How I mote tell anon right the gladnesse / Of Troilus, to Venus herying , / To the which who nede hath, God him bring.
page 94,
- And whan that folk it to his fader tolde, / Nat oonly he, but al his contree merye / Was for this child, and God they thanke and herye .
page 117,
- Thyse aungeles heryeth here wyth stevene, / Ase he hys hare quene of he[ve]ne.
page 563,
- And Lord God, what herying is it to bilden thee a church of dead stones, and robben thy quicke churches of their bodilich liuelood?
page 797,
- Thenot'', now nis the time of merimake. / Nor ''Pan to herye , nor with love to playe.