different between farse vs farsee

farse

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /f??(?)s/
  • Homophone: farce

Noun

farse (plural farses)

  1. A vernacular paraphrase inserted into Latin liturgy.

Verb

farse (third-person singular simple present farses, present participle farsing, simple past and past participle farsed)

  1. (transitive) To insert vernacular paraphrases into (a Latin liturgy).
    • 2010, Frank C. Senn, The People's Work: A Social History of the Liturgy (page 138)
      There is also evidence of glossing (or farsing) the texts of the Epistles read in the masses of the Christmas Octave.

References

  • OED 2nd edition 1989

Anagrams

  • Afers, Fears, Feras, Frase, SAfrE, fares, fears, reafs, safer

Italian

Noun

farse f

  1. plural of farsa

Anagrams

  • frase
  • fresa
  • sfare
  • sfera

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Latin farsa, from farcire, via French farce

Noun

farse m (definite singular farsen, indefinite plural farser, definite plural farsene)

  1. a farce (comedy)
  2. mince (minced meat) (UK)

References

  • “farse” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Latin farsa, from farcire, via French farce

Noun

farse m (definite singular farsen, indefinite plural farsar, definite plural farsane)

  1. a farce (comedy)
  2. mince (minced meat) (UK)

References

  • “farse” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

farse From the web:

  • farseer meaning
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  • farsi language
  • what does farce mean
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farsee

English

Etymology

From far +? see. Compare Dutch verziend (farseeing, long-sighted), German fernsehen (to look from afar, watch television).

Verb

farsee (third-person singular simple present farsees, present participle farseeing, simple past farsaw, past participle farseen)

  1. To see at or from a distance.
  2. To see by foresight; see clairvoyantly; view or sense telepathically.

Derived terms

  • farseer
  • farseeing
  • farsight

Related terms

  • farspeak

Anagrams

  • feares

farsee From the web:

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