Home1860 Edition

LORD

Volume 13 · 128 words · 1860 Edition

a title of honour given to those who are noble either by birth or by creation. The title is also by courtesy given to all the sons of dukes and marquises, and to the eldest sons of earls; and it is likewise a title of honour bestowed on those who are honourable by their employment, as Lord Advocate, Lord Chamberlain, Lord Chancellor, and the like. The word is Saxon, but abbreviated from two syllables into one. "The etymology of the word," says Coates, "is well worth observing; for it was composed of *hlaf*, a loaf of bread, and *ford*, to give or afford; so that *Hlaford*, now *Lord*, implies a giver of bread, because in those ages such great men kept extraordinary houses, and fed all the poor."