[104.8.] ǫnd þæt wǣron. See [§ 40, Note 3].
[104.15.] hwæt þæs sōþes wæs. Sweet errs in explaining sōþes as attracted into the genitive by þæs. It is not a predicate adjective, but a partitive genitive after hwæt.
[104.25.] syxa sum. See [§ 91, Note 2].
[105.2.] on bēoð. See [§ 94, (5)].
[105.19.] Eal þæt his man. Pronominal genitives are not always possessive in O.E.; his is here the partitive genitive of hit, the succeeding relative pronoun being omitted: All that (portion) of it that may, either-of-the-two, either be grazed or plowed, etc. ([§ 70, Note]).
[106.11-12.] scypa ... leohte. These words exhibit inflections more frequent in Late than in Early West Saxon. The normal forms would be scypu, leoht; but in Late West Saxon the -u of short-stemmed neuters is generally replaced by -a; and the nominative accusative plural neuter of adjectives takes, by analogy, the masculine endings; hwate, gōde, hālge, instead of hwatu, gōd, hālgu.
[1] = meahte, mihte.
[2] = hiera.
[3] = seofon.
[4] = horsum.