Lollard
Lollard , noun
[Late Latin Lollardi, Lullardi, from Walter Lolhardus, a German; compare LG. & Dutch lollen to mumble, to hum, sing in a murmuring strain; hence, OD. lollaerd a mumbler, i. e., of prayers or psalms, which was prob. the origin of the name. See Loll, Lull.]
(a)
(Ecclesiastical Hist.) One of a sect of early reformers in Germany.
(b)
(Ecclesiastical Hist.) One of the followers of Wyclif in England.
By Lollards all know the Wyclifities are meant, so called from Walter Lollardus, one of their teachers in Germany.