swê—sweiban.
417
13, 9. 13. I Cor. 4, 7. 5, 3. 7, 7. 8, 25. 9, 20. 21. 22. 26. 13, 11. II Cor. 2, 17. 3, 1. 5, 20. 6, 4. 8. 9. 10. 13. 7, 15. 10, 2. 11, 15. 16. 17. 21. Gal. 4, 12. 14. 5, 14. Eph. 5, 1. 8. 6, 20. Phil. 1, 20. 2, 7. 22. Col. 2, 20. 3, 12. 18. 22. 23. I Thess. 2, 11. 5, 2. 4. 6. II Thess. 3, 15. I Tim. 5, 1. 2. II Tim. 2, 3. 9. 17. Tit. 1, 7. Philem. 17. Skeir. VI, a. d. VII, b; w. pres. partic. (cos av w. inf.), as if; II Cor. 10, 9; (oW) Mt. 9, 36. Mk. 9, 26. Lu.3,22. (WOTCEP) II Cor. 8, 7. (HctSocts) Jo. 13, 34. 15, 4. Gal. 5, 21. Eph. 3, 3. (naSws nai) I Thess. 4, 13; KWÔ qaþ (íi?5 KÎrrev), that he said; Mk. 14, 72; iþ mi swê (cSerrf).; Gal. 4,16; (ridded in Goth.; uaí) I Tim. 4, 7. (b) analeikô swê ('similiter ac'), in like manner; Skeir. VII, a; samaleikô jah swê (ojuoíoas •nal cos), likewise also as; Lu. 17, 28; (c) for swa-swê, etc., s. swa (4); for swalauþs-swê, s. swalauþs; for swaleiks s\vê, s. swaleiks, at the end; (d) swê— jah (cos— Hcú); Mt. 6. 10; for swê—swa jah and swa jah-swê, s. swa. (2) before numerals (oos), about; Mk. 5, 13. 8, 9. Lu. 8, 42. Jo. 6, 19. (covet); Lu. 1, 56. 3, 23. 9, 14. 28. (3) temporal (K>$), as, when; Mk. 4, 36. Lu. 1, 41. 4, 25. Jo. 6. 16. 11, 6. 18, 6. (rjvÎKcc) Neh. 6, 16. 7, 1; w. pret. indie, (in Gr. the gen. abs.); Lu. 8, 23. (4) so that, w. pret. indie.
w. inf.= swê w. inf., in Lu. 9, 52); Lu. 5, 7; swê natja dislmu-pôdêdun (ôispprfywro ôs TO ÔÎKTUOV); Lu. 5, 6. — Allied to swa, q. v. Comp. swê-]?áuh.
swêgiiiþa, f.,joy; Lu. 1,14. (swig-ni]>ai; comp. Goth. Grammar, 7, n. 3) 44. — Prom swêgiijan (q. v.; or, more likely, from a lost adj., swêgna-; comp. v. B., p. 157.) andsuff.-\-]>o.
swêgnjan (swignjan; s. prec. w.), w. F., to rejoice, triumph; Lu. 10, 21. Col. 3, 15; folld. by du (in) w. dat.; Lu. 1, 47; or in (in) w. dat.; Jo. 5, 35. Skeir. VI, a. — From a lost adj.,
*swôgno-. (S. L. M., 141. 516. 536), swigria-, from stem swêg (Comp. O. E. swê^, m., sound, tone): swig (Comp. O. E. swîn-siau, from *swijnsian; s. KL, Anglia, IV, 2, p. 18), to sound, and sufí'. -na. Allied to swôg-jan, q. v.
sweiban, str. v. (56, n. 1; 172, n. 1), to cease; Lu. 7, 45. [Allied to O. H. G. *swiftôn, in gi-swif-tôn (For gi-, s. ga-), to be still or quiet, M. H. G. swiften (O. H. G. *swiftjaii), to silence, appease, still; and to N. H. G.
*schwichtigen (prop. L.G., with ch for f; s. luftus), râ beschwich-tigen (For be-, s. bi-), to silence, appease, still. From Germanic root swîb, Jndg. swîbh, 772 Gr. ffi(ppos(w. suff. -TO},adj., weak. Comp. Kl., beschwichtigen, and Feist, sweiban. S. unswei-bands.]