and

Part of speech: preposition
(Acc) 1) in, into; on, along; to (in a spatial sense); 2) at (in a temporal sense)
Etymology
[← Prot-Germ *anda; in oth O German languages only as a pref: Goth and-; OE and-, ond-, on-, an-; O Fris and-, ond-, ont-, und-; O Sax and-, ant-, an-; Dt ont-; OHG ant-, int-, ent- (Mod G ant-, ent-); Icel and- ← Indo-Europ *anti-, *anta- Sanskr ánti “before; near”; Anc Gr αντα “before, opposite, against”; ἀντι- pref; Lat ante “in front; forwards; before, previously”; anti- pref; Lith añt prep “before; on, upon”]
Concordance
and - Matth. VIII, 32; IX, 26; XI, 1; XXVII, 15; Mrk. I, 28; I, 39; V, 13; XIV, 9 etc
anduh = and + -uh part (vid -uh) - Skeirns. V, 3