Mesel vs Meself - What's the difference?
mesel | meself |
(obsolete) A leper.
(obsolete) A wretched or revolting person.
* 1395 , (John Wycliffe), Bible , Isaiah LIII:
(obsolete) Leprosy.
* 1485 , (Thomas Malory), Le Morte Darthur , Book XVII:
(slang, or, dialectal)
:1997 , , (w, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone) , iv:
::‘True, I haven’t introduced meself .’
As an adjective mesel
is having leprosy; leprous.As a noun mesel
is a leper.As a pronoun meself is
alternative form of lang=en.mesel
English
Alternative forms
* mesell, myselNoun
(en noun)- Verily he suffride oure sikenesses, and he bar oure sorewis; and we arettiden him as a mysel and smytun of God and maad low.
- So hit befelle many yerys agone there happened on her a malodye, and whan she had lyene a grete whyle she felle unto a mesell , and no leche cowde remedye her [...].