different between forban vs forbar
forban
English
Etymology
From Middle English forbannen, partly from Middle English for- + bannen, equivalent to for- +? ban; and partly from Old French forbenir (“to banish”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian ferbanne (“to banish”), West Frisian ferbanne (“to banish”), Dutch verbannen (“to banish”), German Low German verbannen (“to banish”), German verbannen (“to banish”), Swedish förbanna (“to curse, damn”).
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -æn
Verb
forban (third-person singular simple present forbans, present participle forbanning, simple past and past participle forbanned)
- (transitive, rare, archaic, poetic or obsolete) To exile; banish.
- 1918, Clark Ashton Smith, "Satan Unrepentant"[1] (also on page 295 of the 2014 collection The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies):
- Lost from those archangelic thrones that star,
- Fadeless and fixed, heaven's light of azure bliss;
- Forbanned of all His splendor and depressed
- Beyond the birth of the first sun, and lower
- Than the last star's decline
- 2013, Daniel Lord Smail, The Consumption of Justice:
- Kenneth Meredith has noted that the coutumiers of northern France "usually called for the confiscation of the property of both executed criminals and persons who had been forbanned."
- 1918, Clark Ashton Smith, "Satan Unrepentant"[1] (also on page 295 of the 2014 collection The Dark Eidolon and Other Fantasies):
French
Etymology
From Middle French fourban, from Old French forsban, forban (“pirate, privateer, banishment”), deverbal of forbenir (“to banish, to exile”), from Frankish furbannjan, *firbannjan (“to ban, banish”), from Proto-Germanic *fra- + *bannijan? (“to request, damn, curse”), from Proto-Indo-European *bh?- (“to say, pronounce”). Cognate with Dutch verbannen (“to outcast, banish, exile”), German verbannen (“to banish, exile”), Norwegian forbanne (“to curse”). More at for-, ban.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /f??.b??/
Noun
forban m (plural forbans)
- (archaic) pirate
- rogue, scoundrel; an unscrupulous individual capable of any wrongdoing
Synonyms
- bandit
- corsaire
- crapule
- flibustier
- gredin
- pirate
Further reading
- “forban” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Old French
Etymology
Deverbal of forbenir.
Noun
forban m (oblique plural forbans, nominative singular forbans, nominative plural forban)
- banishment (state of being banished)
References
- Godefroy, Frédéric, Dictionnaire de l'ancienne langue française et de tous ses dialectes du IXe au XVe siècle (1881) (forban)
Romanian
Etymology
From French forban.
Noun
forban m (plural forbani)
- pirate
Declension
forban From the web:
- what does forbearance mean
- what does the word forbearance mean
- what is the word forbearance mean
forbar
English
Etymology
From Middle English forbarren (“to bar, bar up, block”), equivalent to for- +? bar. Compare Middle High German verbarren (“to forbar”).
Verb
forbar (third-person singular simple present forbars, present participle forbarring, simple past and past participle forbarred)
- (obsolete, transitive) To bar in; to shut up.
- (obsolete, transitive) To bar, fend off, ward off.
- (obsolete, transitive) To exclude, deny.
forbar From the web:
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