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fleme

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English flemen, from Old English flȳman, flīeman (to put to flight, drive away, banish), from flēam (flight).

Verb

fleme (third-person singular simple present flemes, present participle fleming, simple past and past participle flemed)

  1. (obsolete) To drive away, chase off; to banish.

Middle English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

    Inherited from Old English flīema (fugitive, exile, outlaw), from flīeman (to escape). Compare flem.

    Alternative forms

    Noun

    fleme

    1. (poetic) One who is banished; an exile, outcast, or fugitive.

    Adjective

    fleme

    1. (poetic) Banished, exiled.
    References

    Etymology 2

      Borrowed from Old French flieme, from Vulgar Latin *fletoma, from Late Latin phlebotomus, from Ancient Greek φλεβότομος (phlebótomos), φλεβοτόμον (phlebotómon).

      Alternative forms

      Noun

      fleme

      1. (Late Middle English, rare) A lancet or fleam.
      Descendants
      • English: fleam
      • Welsh: fflaim
      References

      Etymology 3

      Noun

      fleme

      1. alternative form of flem

      Etymology 4

      Noun

      fleme

      1. alternative form of flewme

      Etymology 5

      Verb

      fleme

      1. alternative form of flemen
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      Spanish

      Etymology

      Borrowed from Occitan flecme, from Vulgar Latin fletoma, from Latin phlebotomus.

      Noun

      fleme m (plural flemes)

      1. a veterinary lancet

      Further reading

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