wilcuma

wilcuma
1. m (-n/-n) welcome, guest; 2. see wilcume

Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.

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  • welcome — I. transitive verb (welcomed; welcoming) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English welcumian, wylcumian, from wilcuma, noun Date: before 12th century 1. to greet hospitably and with courtesy or cordiality 2. to accept with pleasure the… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • welcome — O.E. wilcuma, exclamation of kindly greeting, from earlier wilcuma (n.) welcome guest, lit. one whose coming is in accord with another s will, from willa pleasure, desire, choice (see WILL (Cf. will) (v.)) + cuma guest, related to cuman (see COME …   Etymology dictionary

  • Euphorbia Cyparissias — Welcome Wel come, a. [OE. welcome, welcume, wilcume, AS. wilcuma a welcome guest, from wil , as a prefix, akin to willa will + cuma a comer, fr. cuman to come; hence, properly, one who comes so as to please another s will; cf. Icel. velkominn… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Welcome — Wel come, a. [OE. welcome, welcume, wilcume, AS. wilcuma a welcome guest, from wil , as a prefix, akin to willa will + cuma a comer, fr. cuman to come; hence, properly, one who comes so as to please another s will; cf. Icel. velkominn welcome, G …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Welcome-to-our-house — Welcome Wel come, a. [OE. welcome, welcume, wilcume, AS. wilcuma a welcome guest, from wil , as a prefix, akin to willa will + cuma a comer, fr. cuman to come; hence, properly, one who comes so as to please another s will; cf. Icel. velkominn… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • gʷā- — Also gʷem . To go, come. Oldest form *gʷeə₂ , colored to *gʷaə₂ , contracted to *gʷā . Derivatives include welcome, adventure, souvenir, acrobat, and diabetes. 1. a …   Universalium

  • welcome — welcomeness, n. welcomer, n. /wel keuhm/, interj., n., v., welcomed, welcoming, adj. interj. 1. (a word of kindly greeting, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure): Welcome, stranger! n. 2. a kindly greeting or re …   Universalium

  • welcome — [12] Old English had the greeting wilcume, which was a compound word formed from wil ‘pleasure’ (ancestor of modern English will) and cume, a derivative of cuman ‘come’. From it was formed the verb wilcumian ‘welcome’. (German has the parallel… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • willcuma — see wilcuma …   Old to modern English dictionary

  • welcome — wel|come1 W2S3 [ˈwelkəm] v [T] 1.) to say hello in a friendly way to someone who has just arrived = ↑greet ▪ I must be there to welcome my guests. ▪ They welcomed us warmly . ▪ His family welcomed me with open arms (=in a very friendly way) . 2.) …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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