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scrivan
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian scrivano. Doublet of scrivano, scrivener, and escribano.
Noun
scrivan (plural scrivans)
- (obsolete) A clerk or writer.
- 1822, Giovanni Battista Belzoni, Narrative of the Operations and Recent Discoveries Within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs, and Excavations, in Egypt and Nubia And of a Journey to the Coast of the Red Sea, in Search of the Ancient Berenice; and Another to the Oasis of Jupiter Ammon, volume 2, page 314:
- They told me their husbands were scrivans to the sultan, and that on their arrival in Cairo they should go to the house of the Khalil Bey till they proceeded to Alexandria; […]
References
- Henry Yule; A[rthur] C[oke] Burnell (1903), “scrivan”, in William Crooke, editor, Hobson-Jobson […] , London: John Murray, […], page 804.
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Italian
Pronunciation
Verb
scrivan
Old Dutch
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *skrīban.
Verb
scrīvan
- to write
Conjugation
Conjugation of scrīvan (strong class 1)
Descendants
Further reading
- “skrīvan”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012
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