fylfot
English
editEtymology
editUncertain, but likely from Middle English fillen (“to fill”) (from Old English fyllan) + fot (“foot”) (from Old English fōt), in reference to its use as a design to be placed at the bottom of stained-glass windows.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editfylfot (plural fylfots)
- A swastika, especially one with the arms bent in an anticlockwise direction.
- 1968, The Discovery of Drama, page 378:
- Morley: A year and a half ago I stumbled into your gingerbread office, a lost, frightened soul in terrified flight across the great yawning terror of doubt—a human being, in short!—and you chanted some hagridden formulas and danged some fylfots...
- 1982, Anthony Burgess, The End of the World News:
- There was a coffee tray on top of it, and spilt coffee part hid the fylfot design of the tray.
Translations
editswastika — see swastika
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- English terms with unknown etymologies
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- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Old English
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