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HOLM

Volume 11 · 84 words · 1842 Edition

(Saxon, HULMUS, insula amnica), denotes an isle or fenny ground, according to Bede, or a river island. And where any place is called by that name, and this syllable is joined with any other in the names of places, it signifies a place surrounded with water, as the Flatholmes and Stepholmes in the Severn near Bristol; but if the situation of the place be not near the water, it may then signify a hilly place, holm in Saxou signifying also a hill or cliff.