I do not think that is a word in olde English.
The word "lap" comes from origins before C.E. 900. It is derived from the Middle English word lappe and the Old English laeppa. Its Middle English and Old English meanings are akin to the word rag in noun form and patch, mend, fold, and wrap in verb form. It can be traced back to the Latin lambere and to the Greek laptein which means to lick.
Old English bæcere, from another Old English word, bacan (to bake).
the word gold comes from the latin word Aurum
The word "it" comes from the Old English word "hit" which means the same thing as "it" (a neuter third person singular pronoun). The history of the word "hit" is too long and involved to get into now.
The English word knot derives from a Proto-Germanic word, via the Old English language.
Before 12th century: Old English modor, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch moeder and German Mutter, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin mater and Greek mētēr, Sanskrit mātṛ.
The Old English word for "no" is "nān."
The Old English word "monath" means "month." It is the word from which the modern English term "month" is derived.
the old English word for yes is yea
Being concerned. The word is not old English and is actually solicitous.
The word "mother" probably evolved from the sanskrit word "Maatr."...which is then copied by latin and greeks...and then to english similarly is for brother which actually was "bhraatr"in sanskrit
The word husband is of Old and Middle English origin. The word husband means householder in Old and Middle English.
development means badhotry.
The English word world comes from the Old English woruld. This comes from the Old German weralt, which means age of man.
Thither is not an Old English word. It merely means "there" in Modern English as in hither and thither, "here and there".
The old English word "nay" is derived from the roots "ne" and "ei". "Ne" is a root that roughly means "no" while "ei" means "ever". In this sense, "nay" means "not ever".
It came from the Old English word "hwit" which means "white"