feigur

التعريفات والمعاني

== Faroese == === Etymology === From the Old Norse feigr, from Proto-Germanic *faigijaz. Cognates include Old High German feigi (German feige (“cowardly”)); Old English fǣge (English fey) and Dutch veeg. Compare feig. === Adjective === feigur (comparative feigari, superlative feigastur) fey, doomed to death; fated to die, bound by death, death-bound ==== Declension ==== ==== Related terms ==== feigd == Icelandic == === Etymology === From the synonymous Old Norse feigr, from Proto-Germanic *faigijaz. Cognates include Old High German feigi (German feige (“cowardly”)); Old English fǣge (English fey) and Dutch veeg. Compare feig. === Pronunciation === Rhymes: -eiːɣʏr === Adjective === feigur (comparative feigari, superlative feigastur) fey, doomed to death; fated to die, bound by death, death-bound (archaic) dead ==== Declension ==== ==== Derived terms ==== ==== Related terms ==== feigð ==== See also ==== dauðvona (“moribund”)