[searo-wundor], st. n., rare wonder: acc. sg., [921].
[seax], st. n., shortsword, hip-knife; dagger: instr. sg. seaxe, [1546].—Comp. wäl-seax.
[seax-ben], st. f., dagger-wound: instr. pl. siex-bennum, [2905].
[seofon], num., seven, [517]; seofan, [2196]; decl. acc. syfone, [3123].
[seomian], w. v.: 1) intrans., to be tied; lie at rest: inf. siomian, [2768]; pret. sg. seomode, [302].—2) w. acc., to put in bonds, entrap, catch: pret. sg. duguðe and geogoðe seomade (cf. 2086-[2092], [161].
[seonu], st. f., sinew: nom. pl. seonowe, [818].
[seóc], adj., feeble, weak; fatally ill: nom. sg. feorh-bennum seóc (of Beówulf, sick unto death), [2741]; siex-bennum seóc (of the dead dragon), [2905]; nom. pl. môdes seóce (sick of soul), [1604].—Comp.: ellen-, feorh-, heaðo-seóc.
[seóðan], st. v. w. acc., to seethe, boil; figuratively, be excited over, brood: pret. sg. ic þäs môd-ceare sorh-wylmum seáð (I pined in heart-grief for that), [1994]; so, [190].
[seóloð], st. m.?, bight, bay (cf. Dietrich in Haupt XI. 416): gen. pl. sióleða bi-gong (the realm of bights = the [surface of the] sea?), [2368].
[seón, sýn], st. f., aspect, sight: in comp. wlite-, wundor-seón, an-sýn.