English

eedit

Alternative forms

eedit

Etymology

eedit

From Middle Inglis

, from Old English

fremde

,

fremede

,

, from Template:Proto, from Template:Proto from Template:Proto. Cognate with Dutch

, German

. More at from.

Adjective

eedit

Fremd (comparative Fremder or maist Fremd, superlative Fremdest or maist Fremd)

  1. (rare or Template:Context 2) strange; foreign, alien; far off or away, distant
    • 1873, Blackwood's Edinburgh magazine:
      [...] and if I'm to be no more hereafter to them that belong to me, than to legions of strange angels, or a whole nation of fremd folk !
  2. (rare or Template:Context 2) not akin, unrelated
    • 1875, John Howard Nodal, George Milner, A glossary of the Lancashire dialect:
      Thus, a person living with a family to whom he is not related is termed "a fremd body." If it were asked, "Is he akin to you?" the answer would be, "Nawe, he's fremd," i.e. "he's one of us, but not a relation."
    • 1851, Mrs. Oliphant (Margaret), Passages in the life of Mrs. Margaret Maitland of Sunnyside:
      [...] seeing that they were fremd in heart, if they were kin in blood.
  3. (rare or Template:Context 2) out of the ordinary, unusual, unwonted
    a fremd day
  4. (rare or Template:Context 2) strange, weird, singular, odd, queer
    A fremd man this. — Hodgson MS.
  5. (archaic or Template:Context 2) wild, untamed

Fremd (plural Fremds)

  1. (rare or Template:Context 2) stranger; guest
  2. (archaic or Template:Context 2) an enmity

References

eedit
  • 1906, The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, "fremd".
  • 1883, The Imperial Dictionary of the English Language, "fremde, fremed".

German

eedit

Etymology

eedit

From Old High German

fremidi

.

Pronunciation

eedit
  • /fʀɛmt/

Adjective

eedit

Fremd (??? please provide the comparative/superlative!)

  1. strange
  2. foreign
    • 2010, Der Spiegel, issue 28/2010, page 93:
      Fast alle Amerikaner können ihre Wurzeln in fremde Länder zurückverfolgen, und deshalb ist Einwanderung ein Thema, das die Identität der USA auf besondere Weise berührt.
      Nearly all Americans can trace back their roots into foreign countries, and therefore immigration is an issue that touches the identity of the US in a special way.
  3. external

Declension

eedit

Derived terms

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Scots

eedit

Adjective

eedit

Fremd