clifan

clifan
clifán, clifáne, s.n. (reg.) bucată mare de pâine; cleanf, călhău, călhan, cărhan, câlfete, crihan, crifoi, codru, coltuc, dărab.
Trimis de blaurb, 15.04.2006. Sursa: DAR

Dicționar Român. 2013.

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  • clífan — sv/t1 3rd pres clífþ past cláf/clifon ptp geclifen to cleave, adhere …   Old to modern English dictionary

  • oþclífan — sv/t1 3rd pres oþclífþ past oþcláf/oþclifon ptp oþclifen to cleave to, stick, adhere …   Old to modern English dictionary

  • cláf — past 3rd sing of clífan …   Old to modern English dictionary

  • cleanf — cleanf, cleánfuri, s.n. (reg.) bucată de pâine, călcâi de pâine; colţuc, cârfan, câlfete, călhău, cărhan, clifan, clihan, crifoi, crihan. Trimis de blaurb, 14.04.2006. Sursa: DAR …   Dicționar Român

  • kleben — Vsw std. (8. Jh.), mhd. kleben, ahd. klebēn, as. kli␢on Stammwort. Aus wg. * klib ǣ Vsw. kleben , auch in ae. cleofian. Durativbildung zu g. * kleib a Vst. haften in anord. klífa klimmen , ae. clīfan, afr. klīva, as. klīban, ahd. klīban haften .… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • cleave — v. a. == split. HD. 917. pret. ‘clewyd’ == cleft. Alys. 3790. 3 pl. ‘clowen,’ ib. 2765. AS. clufan v. n. == adhere to. HD. 1300. AS. clifan …   Oldest English Words

  • cleave — cleave1 verb (past clove or cleft or cleaved; past participle cloven or cleft or cleaved) 1》 split or sever along a natural grain or line.     ↘split (a molecule) by breaking a particular chemical bond.     ↘Biology (of a cell) divide. 2》 move… …   English new terms dictionary

  • kleben — kleben: Das ursprüngliche intransitive Verb, das erst in spätmhd. Zeit auch transitive Geltung erlangte, ist eine Durativbildung zu einem altgerm. starken Verb: mhd. klīben, ahd. klīban »anhaften, ‹an›kleben«, aengl. clīfan »anhaften, kleben«,… …   Das Herkunftswörterbuch

  • gel-1 —     gel 1     English meaning: “to curl; round, *gland, growth, ball, fathom, arm”     Deutsche Übersetzung: “ballen, sich ballen; Gerundetes, Kugeliges” etc     Material: evidence for the unadjusted root form are seldom and partly very doubtful …   Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary

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