frefran
Old English
Alternative forms
- frœ̄fran
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *frōbrijan (“to console, comfort”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfreːf.rɑn/, [ˈfreːv.rɑn]
Verb
frēfran
- to comfort, console, soothe
- 10th century, The Wanderer:
- oþþe mec frēondlēasne · frēfran wolde,
wēman mid wynnum. · Wāt sē þe cunnað,
hū slīþen bið · sorg tō ġefēran,
þām þe him lȳt hafað · lēofra ġeholena.- or friendless me would soothe,
allure with glees. Knows the one who undergoes,
how tough is sorrow as a companion,
to whom little has dear confidants for himself.
- or friendless me would soothe,
Conjugation
Conjugation of frēfran (weak, class 1)
| infinitive | frēfran | frēfrenne |
|---|---|---|
| indicative mood | present tense | past tense |
| first person singular | frēfre | frēfrede |
| second person singular | frēfrest | frēfredest |
| third person singular | frēfreþ | frēfrede |
| plural | frēfraþ | frēfredon |
| subjunctive | present tense | past tense |
| singular | frēfre | frēfrede |
| plural | frēfren | frēfreden |
| imperative | ||
| singular | frēfre | |
| plural | frēfraþ | |
| participle | present | past |
| frēfrende | (ġe)frēfred | |
Derived terms
- āfrēfran
- frēfrung
- ġefrēfran
Related terms
Descendants
- Middle English: frefrien, frefren, frevren
- ⇒ Middle English: frevrenesse, frievrenesse