patrol

Bedeutung (Englisch)

Konzepte

Patrouillieren

Eskortierung

Besuchsrundgang

Ausspähen

Spähtrupp

Runde machen

Streifendienst

patroullieren

Patrouillenfahrt

Sperrflug

auf Streife gehen

Frequenz

B2
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/pəˈtɹəʊl/
Etymologie (Englisch)

In summary

From French patrouille, from Old French patrouille, patouille (“a night-watch”, literally “a tramping about”), from patrouiller, patouiller, patoiller (“to paddle or pudder in water, dabble with the feet, begrime, besmear”), from patte, pate (“paw, foot of an animal”), from Vulgar Latin *patta (“paw, foot”), from Frankish *patta (“paw, sole of the foot”), from Proto-Germanic *paþjaną, *paþōną (“to walk, tread, go, step, pace”), possibly from Proto-Indo-European *(s)pent-, *(s)pat- (“path; to walk”), a variant of Proto-Indo-European *pent-, *pat- (“path; to go”); see find. Cognate with Dutch pad, patte (“paw”), Low German pedden (“to step, tread”), German patschen (“to splash, smack, dabble, waddle”), German Patsche (“a swatter, beater, paw, puddle, mire”). Related to pad, path.

Related words

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes