free
Bedeutung (Englisch)
-
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- (obsolete) Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Obtainable without any payment.
- Obtainable without any payment.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Unconstrained.
- Without; not containing (what is specified); exempt; clear; liberated.
- Ready; eager; acting without spurring or whipping; spirited.
- Invested with a particular freedom or franchise; enjoying certain immunities or privileges; admitted to special rights; followed by of.
- (obsolete) Certain or honourable; the opposite of base.
- Privileged or individual; the opposite of common.
Konzepte
frei machen
erledigen
Kostenlosigkeit
mit Briefmarken versehen
mit Marken versehen
wieder gutmachen
wieder verbessern
aus Schwierigkeiten helfen
fertig werden
sich befreien
Gebührenfreiheit
zu Ende kommen
Frei-
für umme
kostenlos, gratis
allgemein verfügbar
besser machen
frei zugänglich
linear unabhängig
losbinden
Synonyme
set at liberty
get free
let escape
doing as one likes
without pay
free-of-charge
not involved
free people
freedom-loving
allow to go
at liberty
allow to escape
at no charge
foot-loose
come loose
cost free
free oneself
free-soil
have free time
let go of
make real
non-working
on his own initiative
out in the open
set loose
be completed
without reason
no charge
not busy
being free
go-as-you-please
cost-free
not restrained
not tied
without bonds
without fetters
non-slave
predicative or adverbial position
freely available
free rendition
liberate relieve exempt
without trying
abstain
become free
enhance
leaving off
not in use
make free
Frequenz
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/fɹiː/
Etymologie (Englisch)
From Middle English free, fre, freo, from Old English frēo (“free”), from Proto-West Germanic *frī, from Proto-Germanic *frijaz (“beloved, not in bondage”), from Proto-Indo-European *priHós (“dear, beloved”), from *preyH- (“to love, please”). Related to friend. cognates, etc Germanic cognates include West Frisian frij (“free”), Dutch vrij (“free”), Low German free (“free”), German frei (“free”), Danish, Swedish and Norwegian fri (“free”). Other cognates include Russian приятель (prijatelʹ, “friend”) and Sanskrit प्रिय (priyá-, “beloved”). Germanic and Celtic are the only Indo-European language branches in which the PIE word with the meaning of "dear, beloved" acquired the additional meaning of "free" in the sense of "not in bondage". This was an extension of the idea of "characteristic of those who are dear and beloved", in other words friends and tribe members (in contrast to unfree inhabitants from other tribes and prisoners of war, many of which were among the slaves – compare the Latin use of liberi to mean both "free persons" and "children of a family"). The verb comes from Middle English freen, freoȝen, from Old English frēon, frēoġan (“to free; make free”), from Proto-West Germanic *frijōn, from Proto-Germanic *frijōną, from Proto-Indo-European *preyH-.
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