*hailnan—haimôþli.
151
well, sound, ace. salvum, whence FT. sauf, whence Mdl. E. sauf, sauve, Mdn. E. safe. The Mdn. E. F. save, Mdl. E. sauve, save, refers to O. Fr. sauver, from Lt. salvare; s. above), m., O. S. hôliand, O. H. O. M. H. G. heilant, N. H. G. heiland (S. nasjands), m., savior. Comp. follg. w.~\
*hailnan, w. v. (194), in ga-h., to be healed; Mt. 8, 8. 13. Lu. 7, 7; folld. by af w. dat.; Mk. 5, 29. — From hails, q. v. Comp. also prec. w.
hails, adj. (124), hale, whole, sound; Mt. 9, 12. Lu. 5, 31. 7, 10. 15, 27. Jo. 7, 23. I Tim. 1, 10. 6, 3. II Tim. 1, 13. 4, 3. Tit. 1, 9. 2, 1; hails wisan, to be sound;. Tit. 1, 13; hails waírþan, to do well, fare well; Jo. 11, 12; used as an exclamation of salutation: hail!; Mk. 15, 18; so w. sijai; Jo. 19, 3. \Cf. O. E. hâl, Mdl.E. h$l, Mdn. E, whole (the w being inorganic), O. N. heill (whence Mdl. E. hail, Mdn. E. hail and hale), O. S. hêl, O. H. G. M. H. G. N. ff.G.heil, whole, sound, healed. As an exclamation of salutation: O. E. wes þu HrôSgâr hâl!; Beowulf, 407; O. N. heill þû farir!; Edda, VafþruSiiismal, 4; and heill þú nú, Vafþruftnirî, loc. cit., 6.—From stem haila-, pre-Germanic kailo- (w. suff. -lo-), from root kai; comp. O. Bulg. cêlú, complete, whole. — Der.: O. E. h£lu (for and
beside h<Me, from hâli; sb is \-uml. of ê,— Goth. ai), f., salvation, Mdl. E. luMe, th. s., beside O. E. há>l, n., salvation, omen, Mdl. E. h<M, salvation, O. N. heill, n. f., O. H. G. M. H. G. N. H. G. heil (S. Kl., heil), n., happiness, prosperity, salvation; further O. E. (w. suff. -i^), Mdl. E. hâli, i, Mdn. E. holy (compel. holiday, Mdl. E. hâlida^i; for dsei, s. dags), O. N. heilagr, O. S. hêlag, O. H. G. heilag, M. H. G. heilec, N. H. G. heilig (S. weihs), whence, respectively, O. E. hâlgian, Mdl. E. halghe, halwe (by labialization), halo-we, Mdn. E. hallow, O. H. G. heilagôn, heiligôn, M. H. G. N. H. G. heiligen, to hallow, sanctify. Further O. E. hâlsian, hsbl-sian (healsian, to beseech, with which it has been mixed; s. hals), Mdl. E. hâlse, O. H. G. heilisôn, to augur, predict; and O. E. hâlsung, f., Mdl. E. hâl-sung, a beseeching,supplication. To the adj. hâl (not to há^lan; s. abo ve), refers also O. E. heelfî (from háeliSa, Goth. *hâliþa, & for a, by i-uml), f., Mdl. E. há>15, hêlSe, Mdn. E. health, O. H. G. heilida, f., health. — Comp. *haili, hailjan, *hailnan.] haimô]»li, n., homestead, lands; Mk. 10, 29. 30. [From stem of haims (q. F.), and suff. þlja-, from ]?la-, Indg. tlo-. Comp. O. H. G. heimuodili, n., allied to heiinuoti, heimôti, n., M. H. G.