færbu

Old English

Etymology

Origin uncertain, possibly borrowed but apparently from Proto-Germanic *farwō, *farhwō (colour), from Proto-Indo-European *perḱ- (mottled, coloured). Compare Old High German farwa, farawa (colour, blee).

This word is the result of a mistaken division of words. The OE passage in the Bosworth-Toller dictionary reads: "Hí habbað blióh and fær bú ungelíce (cf. hí sint swíþe ungelíces híwes and ungelíce faraþ" -- the former sentence translates as "he has colour and mode of going both unlike", i.e. he differs both in his colour and in his mode of going (of Jesus).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfærbu/

Noun

færbu f

  1. colour
    Habbaþ færbu ungelīce and mǣgwlitas "they have colour and species unlike"
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