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ostur
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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Faroese
Etymology
From Old Norse ostr, from Proto-Germanic *justaz, from Proto-Indo-European *yaus-, *yūs- (“sap, juice, broth”), from Proto-Indo-European *yew(ǝ)- (“to blend, mix (food), knead”).
Noun
ostur m (genitive singular osts, plural ostar)
Declension
Derived terms
- soltin ostur
- geitarostur
- smeltiostur
- smyrjiostur
- ostakøka
See also
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Icelandic
Etymology
From Old Norse ostr (whence also the Danish ost, Faroese ostur, Norwegian ost and Swedish ost) from Proto-Germanic *justaz. Akin to Latin ius, Proto-Slavic *juxa. Compare Finnish juusto.
Pronunciation
Noun
ostur m (genitive singular osts, nominative plural ostar)
Declension
Derived terms
- geitaostur (“goat's cheese”)
- gráðostur (“blue cheese”)
- mysuostur (“whey cheese, brown cheese”)
- ostabakki (“cheeseboard”)
- ostagerð (“cheesemaking”)
- ostahnífur (“cheese knife”)
- ostakaka (“cheesecake”)
- ostaskeri (“cheese slicer”)
- ostefni (“curd”)
- ostsneið (“slice of cheese”)
- rjómaostur (“cream cheese”)
- smurostur (“cheese spread”)
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Old French
Alternative forms
- hostur
Noun
ostur oblique singular, m (oblique plural osturs, nominative singular osturs, nominative plural ostur)
- goshawk
- c. 1150, Thomas d'Angleterre, Le Roman de Tristan, Champion Classiques edition, →ISBN, page 214, lines 2814–7:
- ove ses dras, a ses oisels,
dunt il ad de bons e de bels.
En sun pung prent un grant ostur
e un drap d'estrange culur- with his cloths and his birds
among which a number of fine ones
he takes a large goshawk in his hand
and a cloth of a strange color
- with his cloths and his birds
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