orlay
English
editEtymology
editLearned borrowing from Old English orlæġ (“fate”), from Proto-West Germanic *oʀlag, *uʀlag, from Proto-Germanic *uzlagą (“destiny; fate”, literally “that which is laid out; out-lay; plan; design”). Equivalent to or- + lay.
Noun
editorlay (plural not attested)
- (Germanic paganism) Fate, destiny.
- 2004, Nathaniel Harris, Witcha: A Book of Cunning:
- There laws they laid, there life chose, To men's sons, and spoke orlay […]
- 2006, An Heathen Reader: Some Thoughts on the State of Things I Think, anheathenreader.blogspot.com/.../some-thoughts-on-state-of-things-i.html:
- I am fully aware of how Oaths affect my Orlay and my Wyrd. I am Oathed to no one, save the Holy Ones and my Wife.
- 2009, Alaric Albertsson, Travels Through Middle Earth:
- You could think of your own orlay as the source or seed of your “personal wyrd.” A newborn infant initially inherits its orlay from its parents and ancestors. This initial orlay is its heritage, compiled from the words and deeds of those ancestors.
- 2011, Swain Wodening, The Sacred and the Holy:
- These deeds done within the innangard of the tribe by its tribesmen are its law, its orlay.
- 2021, Winifred Rose, Heathen Soul Lore Foundations:
- Remember how I wrote at the beginning of this chapter that the Norns 'shape' orlay. Orlay itself gives a person 'shape' within the dimensions of Time and Wyrd.
See also
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- English terms borrowed from Old English
- English learned borrowings from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms prefixed with or-
- English lemmas
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