gefær

التعريفات والمعاني

== Old English == === Etymology 1 === From ġe- +‎ fǣr. Cognate to Old Saxon gifār, Dutch gevaar, German Gefahr. ==== Alternative forms ==== ġefēr — Anglian, late Kentish ==== Pronunciation ==== IPA(key): /jeˈfæːr/ ==== Noun ==== ġefǣr m sudden danger, calamity; ambush ===== Declension ===== Irregular: === Etymology 2 === From ġe- +‎ fær, from Proto-Germanic *farą, from the same source as Old English faran ==== Alternative forms ==== ġefer — Vespasian Psalter Mercian, late Kentish ==== Pronunciation ==== IPA(key): /jeˈfær/ ==== Noun ==== ġefær n way, journey, course, expedition; a (collective) going ===== Declension ===== Strong a-stem: ===== Derived terms ===== sċipġefær ==== References ==== Joseph Bosworth; T. Northcote Toller (1898), “GEFӔR”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, second edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.