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fred

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Fred, FRED, and frêd

Catalan

Etymology

Inherited from Latin frīgidus (cold, cool, chilling) (through a contracted Vulgar Latin or Late Latin form fridus, attested in a Pompeian inscription, or frigdus, fricdus, in the Appendix Probi; compare Occitan fred/freid/freg, French froid, Italian freddo, Spanish frío), from frīgeō, frīgēre (be cold).

Pronunciation

Adjective

fred (feminine freda, masculine plural freds, feminine plural fredes)

  1. cold, cool
    Antonym: calent

Noun

fred m or f (plural freds)

  1. cold
    Antonym: calor
    tinc fredI'm cold

Usage notes

  • The feminine form of the noun is dialectal (Central, Nord) and most likely derived from Spanish.

Derived terms

Further reading

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Danish

Etymology 1

From Old Danish frith, from Old Norse friðr, from Proto-Germanic *friþuz, cognate with Swedish fred, frid, German Frieden, Dutch vrede.

Pronunciation

Noun

fred c (singular definite freden, not used in plural form)

  1. peace
Declension
More information common gender, singular ...

Etymology 2

See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /freːˀð/, [ˈfʁ̥æˀð], [ˈfʁ̥æðˀ]

Verb

fred

  1. imperative of frede
Derived terms

References

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Norwegian Bokmål

Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Etymology

From Old Norse friðr, from Proto-Germanic *friþuz.

Pronunciation

Noun

fred m (definite singular freden)

  1. peace

Derived terms

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

Etymology

From Old Norse friðr, from Proto-Germanic *friþuz.

Pronunciation

Noun

fred m (definite singular freden)

  1. peace

Derived terms

References

Romansch

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin frīgidus (cold, cool, chilling) (through a contracted Vulgar Latin or Late Latin form fridus, attested in a Pompeian inscription, or frigdus, fricdus), from frīgeō, frīgēre (be cold).

Adjective

fred m (feminine singular freda, masculine plural freds, feminine plural fredas)

  1. (Sutsilvan) cold

Synonyms

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Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse friðr, from Proto-Germanic *friþuz (cf. German Low German: Freed, Freden, as another possible influence).

Pronunciation

Noun

fred c

  1. peace
  2. a peace treaty
    freden i Versaillesthe treaty of Versailles

Usage notes

Fred is peace as opposite of war or similar concrete conflicts. For peace as opposite to chaos, disturbance or anxiety the word frid is used.

Declension

More information nominative, genitive ...

Hyponyms

  • arbetsfred

Derived terms

References

Anagrams

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Volapük

Noun

fred (nominative plural freds)

  1. joy
    • 1932, Arie de Jong, Leerboek der Wereldtaal, page 21:
      O fred kion!
      Oh, what joy!

Declension

More information singular, plural ...

1 status as a case is disputed
2 in later, non-classical Volapük only

Derived terms

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