456
þandê—
14, 19. 16, 10. 25. 17, 11. Gal. 2, 20. 4, 7. Skeir. I, b; niþ (= ni-h) þan p., th. s. (OUMÎTI as); Lu. 20, 40. (wKSTi) Mk.ll, 14. II Cor. 5, 15. Skeir. Ill, b; þ. ni, th. s. (ovnêri); Mk. 10, 8. 12, 34. Jo. 6, 66. 14, 30. 15, 15. II Cor. 1, 23; ju þ. ni, th. s.; Lu. 15, 19. 21. (juifxart) Mk. 9, 25. Eph. 4, 14. 17. 28; iiih— þ., th. s. (ovôi—s'-ri); Lu. 20, 36; iii þ. ni, th. s. (ovxsn); Jo.
16. 21. II Cor. 5, 16. — From
þana (S. prec. w.) and *seiþs,
q. v. Com p. follg. w.
J»andê (jmndei), conj., (1) if (ei);
Mt. 6, 30. Jo. 5, 47. 8, 46. 13,

17. Rom. 11, 16. I Cor. 15, 12. Gal. 3, 29. (si âá) Gal. 4, 7. (ei yap} Rom. 11, 21; (2) because, since (on); Lu. 2, 30. 16, 3. Jo. 5, 38. 9, 16. I Cor. 15, 20 (added in Goth.; s. text and note); (3) notwithstanding (TtJíyr); Phil. 1. 18. Skeir. VI, d; (4) since (ênsi); Lu. 1, 34. (fe) Jo. 12, 35 (S. note). 36. (ok) Gal. 6, 10. [Cf. O. H. G. daiita, adv. and conj., therefore, because. Allied to O. E. Senden, tSendyn, conj. and adv., whilst, until, meanwhile. S. þaii, also prec. w.]
þaiiei, conj. (S. also Jmn-ei, under þana), when (ore); Jo. 9, 4; jah þariei, inasmuch as (sq? oeov); Mt. 25,40.45. —From þan and -ei, q. v. Comp. miþ-þanei.
*l>anjan, w. v. (187), to stretch, in uf-þ., w. sik, to stretch one's self(£KT£íveiv); II Cor. 10, 14;
folld. by du w. dat.: to stretch or reach after (êTtnirzíveaSicti w. dat.); Phil. 3, 14. [Caus. of a lost v. *þinan (pret. *þan). Cf. O. E. tîerman (for *^5annjan, by i-umî. and loss of] alter a long-syllable, from t5aujan, by gemination before j), Mdl. E. Qenne, to stretch, O. N. þeiija, th. s., O. S. tlienian, to set (a net), O. H. G. M. II. G. den(n)en, N. H. G. dolmen, th. s. From pre-Germanic root ten; comp. Gr. reivsiv, Skr. root tan, to stretch, Lt. tendere, to stretch, extend, direct, whence Fr. tendre, whence Mdl. E. tende, Mdn. E. tend, to aim at, move towards, incline, bond to; compds.: attend (short tend), con-, dis-, ex-, in-, por-, pre-, sub-tend, all of Lt. orig., some directly, some indirectly through the Fr.; for those and further cognates ofLt. orig.,such as tense, intense, tension, tent, intent, ostensible, ostentation, superintendent, s. Sk., tend (1).— Allied to O. E. þynne (stem þunja-, orig. n-stem; s. KL, Nom. St., p. 19), Mdl. E. Sinne, Mdn. E. thin, O. N. þunnr, O. H. G. dunni, M. H. G. dunne, N. H. G. diinn, Du. dun, Eff. dônii, adj., thin, Gr. raw- (in composition),stretched, extended, long, Skr. tanú-, extended, long, thin, Lt. tenuis, thin, s1im.~\
þank; s. þagks.
þan-nu, conj. (218), then, so then,