Dright

//dɹaɪt// noun

noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    A multitude; army; host. historical

    "[…] and Finn's compatriots were of course his subjects; more particularly, his close associates, the members of his dright."

  2. 2
    Alternative form of drighten. alt-of, alternative
  3. 3
    A lord; ruler; chief; leader.

    ""Hey, you!" Christopher called out in the most lordly way he could. "You there! Take me to the Dright at once!""

  4. 4
    The Lord; The Lord God; Christ. capitalized, often

Example

More examples

"[…] and Finn's compatriots were of course his subjects; more particularly, his close associates, the members of his dright."

Etymology

Etymology 1

From Middle English drihte, from Old English driht, dryht (“a multitude, an army, company, body of retainers, nation, a people, men”), from Proto-West Germanic *druhti, from Proto-Germanic *druhtiz (“troop, following”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰrewgʰ- (“to hold, hold fast, support”). Cognate with Old Frisian dregte (“people, crowd, escort, retinue, host”), Middle Low German drucht (“band, war-team”), Middle High German truht (“multitude, offspring”), Icelandic drótt (“people, entourage, bodyguard”), Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐌳𐍂𐌰𐌿𐌷𐍄𐍃 (gadrauhts, “soldier”). Related also to German Truchsess (“steward”), from Middle High German truhtsæze (“chairman of a multitude, steward”, literally “sitting one/presider next to/in front of a multitude". The meaning "multitude" survives in present day German in the sense of "representing a court”), from Old High German truhtsāzzo.

Etymology 2

From Middle English dright, driȝt, earlier drihten, from Old English dryhten (“a ruler, king, lord, prince, the supreme ruler, the Lord, God, Christ”), from Proto-West Germanic *druhtin, from Proto-Germanic *druhtinaz (“leader, chief, lord”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰrewgʰ- (“to hold, hold fast, support”). Cognate with Scots drichtin, drichtine (“lord, the Lord”), Old Frisian drochten (“lord”), Old Saxon drohtin (“lord”), Middle High German truhten, trohten (“ruler, lord”), Danish drot (“king”), Swedish drotten, drott (“king, ruler, sovereign”), Icelandic drottinn (“lord, master, ruler, God”), Finnish ruhtinas (“sovereign prince”). Related also to Old English dryht (“a multitude, an army, company, body of retainers, nation, a people, men”), Old English ġedryht (“fortune, fate”), Old English drēogan (“to serve in the military, endure”). More at dree.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.