ge-feormian, w. v., to feast, to eat; pret. part. sôna häfde unlyfigendes eal gefeormod fêt and folma, [745].
[feorran], w. v., w. acc., to remove: inf. sibbe ne wolde wið manna hwone mägenes Deniga feorh-bealo feorran, feó þingian, (Grendel) would not from friendship free any one of the men of the Danes of life's evil, nor allay it for tribute, [156].
[a]feorran], adv., from afar: a) of space, [361], [430], [826], [1371], [1820], etc.; siððan äðelingas feorran gefricgean fleám eówerne, when noble men afar learn of your flight (when the news of your flight reaches distant lands), [2890]; fêrdon folctogan feorran and neán, from far and from near, [840]; similarly, neán and feorran þu nu [friðu] hafast, [1175]; wäs þäs wyrmes wîg wîde gesýne ... neán and feorran, visible from afar, far and near, [2318].—b) temporal: se þe cûðe frumsceaft fira feorran reccan (since remote antiquity), [91]; similarly, feorran rehte, [2107].
[feorran-cund], adj., foreign-born: dat. sg. feorran-cundum, [1796].
[feor-weg], st. m., far way: dat. pl. mâdma fela of feorwegum, many precious things from distant paths (from foreign lands), [37].
[feónd], st. m., enemy: nom. sg., [164], [726], [749]; feónd on helle (Grendel), [101]; acc. sg., [279], [1865], [2707]; dat. sg. feónde, [143], [439]; gen. sg. feóndes, [985], [2129], [2290]; acc, pl. feónd, [699]; dat. pl. feóndum, [420], [1670]; gen. pl. feonda [294], [809], [904].
[feónd-grâp], st. f., foe's clutch: dat. (instr.) pl. feónd-grâpum fäst, [637].
[feónd-sceaða], w. m., one who is an enemy and a robber: nom. sg. fâh feónd-scaða (a hostile sea-monster), [554].
[feónd-scipe], st. m., hostility: nom. sg., [3000].