Feminino
Significado (Inglês)

  1. (feminine) woman (adult female human)
  2. (feminine) wife (married woman, especially in relation to her spouse)
  3. (feminine) a title of courtesy, equivalent to Mrs/Ms, which has nearly replaced Fräulein in the function of Miss
  4. (feminine) madam (polite form of address for a woman or lady)
  5. (feminine) lady; noblewoman (woman of breeding or higher class)

Freqüência

A1
Dialetos

Zurique

Zurique

frau

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

frau

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

boone

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

hutte

Argóvia

Argóvia

tschättere

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

stigg

Lucerna

Lucerna

frau

Lucerna

Lucerna

frou

São Galo

São Galo

frou

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

schiff

Basileia-Campo

Basileia-Campo

bettfläsche

Dados fornecidos por: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Pronunciado como (IPA)
/fʁaʊ̯/
Etimologia (Inglês)

In summary

From Middle High German vrouwe, from Old High German frouwa (“mistress”), from Proto-West Germanic *frauwjā, from Proto-Germanic *frawjǭ, a feminine form of *frawjô (“lord”), giving Old English frēa (“lord, king; God, Christ; husband”), frēo (“woman”), from Proto-Indo-European *proHwo-, a derivation from *per- (“to go forward”). Cognate with Old Saxon frūa (hence Middle Low German vrouwe, Modern Low German frug), Old Norse freyja and frú (hence Icelandic frú and Norwegian frue). Further cognates include German Fron (“corvée, soccage”) and its kin. The Indo-European root is also the source of Proto-Slavic *pravъ (“right, straight, correct”), whence Old Church Slavonic правъ (pravŭ), Russian пра́вый (právyj, “right”), perhaps also Ancient Greek πρῶρα (prôra, “bow, prow”) and the first element of Latin provincia, if this is from Proto-Indo-European *prōwiōn.

Notes

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