different between parage vs parge
parage
English
Etymology
From Middle English parage, from Old French parage, perage, from pair (“equal”) + -age. Doublet of peerage.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?pa??d?/
Noun
parage (uncountable)
- (archaic) Lineage, parentage; rank, especially as high or noble.
- A feudal institution that recognizes equality of rights and status between two rulers, and equality in the portions of an inheritance.
- A woman's marriage portion or dowry.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pa.?a?/
Noun
parage m (plural parages)
- parage (social rank)
- (plural only) environs, surroundings
Further reading
- “parage” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Middle English
Alternative forms
- parag, perage, porache
Etymology
From Old French parage; equivalent to pere (“peer”) +? -age.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pa?ra?d?(?)/
Noun
parage (uncountable)
- One's bloodline or ancestry, especially in terms of relative social status.
- A great or noble bloodline; an ancestry of high social status.
- (rare) Common social status or position; societal equalness.
- (rare) The right to hold land due to one's societal equivalence to other tenants.
- (rare) Esteem, significance.
Related terms
- disparage
- disparagen
Descendants
- English: parage
References
- “par??e, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2019-04-21.
Old French
Alternative forms
- paraige (Conon de Béthune)
Noun
parage m (oblique plural parages, nominative singular parages, nominative plural parage)
- parage (social rank)
Descendants
- Middle English: parage, parag, perage, porache
- English: parage
- French: parage
See also
- eritage
- linage
parage From the web:
- what parade is today
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parge
English
Etymology
Probably from parget (verb) (perhaps influenced by sparge (verb)), from Old French porjeter, progeter, pourgeter (“to cast; to plaster a wall”) (compare Old French parjeter (“to cast (especially light) widely”); Middle French pourgetter (Lille and Tournai), Norman porjeter (“to plaster”); French pordjèter (“to add mortar between stones”) (Liège and Namur)), from Old French por- (“through”) + jeter (“to throw”), from Latin porr? (“further; onwards”) + Vulgar Latin, Late Latin iect?re, from Latin iact?re (“to cast, hurl, throw; to scatter, toss”) (compare Latin parjactare, purjettare, pargettare, progettare).
The noun form of parge was derived from the verb.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /p??(?)d?/
- (General American) IPA(key): /p??d?/
- Rhymes: -??(?)d?
Noun
parge (plural parges)
- (construction) A coat of cement mortar on the face of rough masonry, the earth side of foundation and basement walls.
Synonyms
- parging
Verb
parge (third-person singular simple present parges, present participle parging, simple past and past participle parged)
- (construction) To apply a parge on to a surface.
Related terms
- parge coat
- pargeting
Further reading
- Parge coat on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- gaper, grape, pager
parge From the web:
- what parge means
- what parcel mean
- parge what does it mean
- pargeter what does it mean
- what is parge coating
- what does parge mean in construction
- what is parged masonry
- prageru
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