different between ferd vs ferk
ferd
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f??(?)d/
- Rhymes: -??(?)d
Etymology 1
From Middle English ferde, feord, furd, from Old English fierd (“army”), from Proto-West Germanic *fardi, from Proto-Germanic *fardiz (“journey, expedition”), from Proto-Indo-European *per- (“to put across, ferry”). Cognate with Old Frisian ferd, fart (“an expedition, journey”), Old High German fart (“journey”) (German Fahrt), Danish færd (“voyage, travel”). Doublet of fyrd. More at fare.
Noun
ferd (plural ferds)
- (Scotland, Northern England) Impetus, speed.
- (obsolete, Scotland, Northern England) A journey.
- (obsolete) An army, a host.
- (obsolete) A military expedition.
- c. 1050, The Paris Psalter
- Þeah þu mid us ne fare on fyrd...
- (Though thou with us not fare on a ferd...)
- c. 1050, The Paris Psalter
- (obsolete) A company, band, or group.
- c. 1400, The Gest Hystoriale of the Destruction of Troy
- And foure scoure fyne shippes to the flete broght... with fyfty, in a furthe, all of fuerse vesell.
- (And four score fine ships to the fleet brought... with fifty in a ferd, all of fierce vessel.)
- 1986, Jack Arthur Walter Bennett, Douglas Gray, Middle English literature - Volume 1 - Page 89:
- For him a lord (British or Roman) is essentially a leader of a 'ferd' (OE fyrd); […]
- c. 1400, The Gest Hystoriale of the Destruction of Troy
Usage notes
- This word in its Anglo-Saxon form, fyrd, is used historically in a technical sense.
Derived terms
- landfyrd
- shipfyrd
- ferdfare
- ferdwite
Related terms
- here
References
- “ferd”, in The Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–, OCLC 57069714
- “ferd”, in The Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–, OCLC 57069714
Etymology 2
From Middle English feren (“to fear”). More at fear.
Noun
ferd (usually uncountable, plural ferds)
- (obsolete) Fear.
Anagrams
- Fred, derf
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Old Norse ferð.
Noun
ferd f or m (definite singular ferda or ferden, indefinite plural ferder, definite plural ferdene)
- journey, voyage, expedition
- være i verd med (also written as iferd): to be on the point of, to be busy with
Derived terms
- folkeferd n
- gjenferd n
- pilegrimsferd
- triumfferd
References
- “ferd” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
- “ferd” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Old Norse ferð.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /fæ?r/, /f?rd/
Noun
ferd f (definite singular ferda, indefinite plural ferder, definite plural ferdene)
- journey, travel
- group of people
- vere i verd med: to be on the point of, to be busy with
Derived terms
- ferdsel
- gjenferd n
- pilegrimsferd
- triumfferd
Verb
ferd
- imperative of ferda and ferde
References
- “ferd” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
ferd From the web:
- what ferdinand magellan discovered
- what ferdinand character are you
- what ferdinand marcos did
- what's ferda mean
- ferdinand what happened to his dad
- ferdinand what happened to tres
- ferdinand what kind of bull
- ferdinand what does that mean
ferk
English
Verb
ferk (third-person singular simple present ferks, present participle ferking, simple past and past participle ferked)
- Alternative form of firk
Anagrams
- f**ker, kerf
ferk From the web:
- freak means
- ferk what does it mean
- ferkel what does it mean
- what does verklempt mean
- firkit what does it mean
- what der ferk swedish chef
- what der ferk
- what der ferk shirt
you may also like
- ferd vs ferk
- fard vs ferd
- flerd vs ferd
- feod vs ferd
- ferd vs fern
- balkiness vs bulkiness
- balkiness vs talkiness
- balminess vs balkiness
- balky vs balkiness
- connection vs necessitude
- relation vs necessitude
- natural vs necessitude
- role vs necessitude
- social vs necessitude
- requirement vs necessitude
- unavoidable vs necessitude
- event vs necessitude
- necessariness vs unnecessariness
- necessariness vs necessity
- necessariness vs necessary