User:Nadando/etymology

Etymology
From, from , from , first used in the Capitularies of Charlemagne in reference to the royal forest (as opposed to the inner woods, or ). Displaced native Middle English, from Old English , Middle English ,  from Old Norse , and Middle English ,  from Old English.

🇨🇬 probably represents the fusion of two earlier words: one taken as an adaptation of the phrase, mistaking forestis for woods (—a development not found in Romance languages; compare 🇨🇬); the other is the continuance of an existing word since  times of  origin, from  as the general word for "forest, forested land". The 🇨🇬 term may have originated as a sound-alike, or been adapted as a play on the Frankish word (Gallo-Romans were often outraged by the King's exclusive hunting rights in the "outside forest", and emphasis to "outside" may have been used to evoke danger). 🇨🇬 comes from from, from , and is cognate to 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, , 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. More at frith, fir.

Latin comes from  from 🇨🇬, akin to 🇨🇬. More at foreign.

Etymology

 * from
 * from
 * from
 * First used in the Capitularies of Charlemagne in reference to the royal forest (as opposed to the inner woods, or ).
 * Displaced native Middle English, from Old English , Middle English ,  from Old Norse , and Middle English ,  from Old English.
 * may have originated as a sound-alike, or been adapted as a play on the Frankish word (Gallo-Romans were often outraged by the King's exclusive hunting rights in the "outside forest", and emphasis to "outside" may have been used to evoke danger).
 * Probably from the fusion of two earlier words
 * from the phrase
 * Mistaking forestem for woods (—a development not found in Romance languages; compare 🇨🇬)
 * from
 * from Proto-Indo-European
 * Akin to English door. More at foreign.
 * from
 * As the general word for "forest, forested land"
 * The continuance of an existing word since times of  origin
 * Cognate to Old High German forst (“‘forest, wooded country, pine wood’”), Old English fyrhþ, fyrhþe (“‘forest, game preserve, wooded country’”), Old Norse fȳri (“‘pine forest’”), German Forst (“‘forest’”). More at frith, fir.
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