pan
Etymology
From Latin pannus. Doublet of pagne.
Noun
pan m (plural pans)
* frange
Etymology
From Old French frenge, from Vulgar Latin *frimbia, metathesis of Late Latin fimbria, from Latin fimbriae.
Noun
frange f (plural franges)
* tendu
張り詰めた
* huer
Etymology
From Middle French huer (“to hoot”), from Old French huer (“to shout to frighten an animal, or to release dogs for a chase”), probably from Old Norse *huta (“to shout, make a noise”). Compare Norwegian huta (“to shout, make a noise, shout commands at a dog”). More at houspiller.
Verb
huer
- to boo
* houspiller
Alternative forms
- gouspiller (Norman)
Etymology
From Middle French houssepillier (“to mistreat by shaking or growling”) and Norman gouspiller (“to shake, thrash, ill-treat”), both from a root *housp-, *gousp- (“to scorn, scold, reproach”), from or akin to Old English hospan, ġehyspan (“to deride, scorn, mock, reproach”) (—Diez), or from Proto-Germanic *husp-, *hūsk-, from Proto-Indo-European *kūd- (“to mock”). Related to Old English hūsc (“mockery, scorn, insult, derision”), Old High German hosc (“invective, censure, mockery, travesty”), Norwegian dialectal huta (“to shout at, treat contemptuously”). Related to English forhush.
Verb
houspiller