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Webster 1913 Edition
Frith
Frith
Frith
,Webster 1828 Edition
Frith
FRITH
,FRITH
,Definition 2024
Frith
frith
frith
English
Noun
frith (uncountable)
Usage notes
- (peace): This sense is obsolete, except that it has recently been revived among followers of Heathenry. When used by Heathens, it is fairly synonymous with the slightly less rare English word comity.
Etymology 2
From Middle English frithien, from Old English friþian (“to give frith to, make peace with, be at peace with, cherish, protect, guard, defend, keep, observe”), from Proto-Germanic *friþōną (“to make peace, secure, protect”), from Proto-Indo-European *prēy-, *prāy- (“to like, love”). Cognate with Scots frethe, freith (“to set free, liberate”), Danish frede (“to have peace, protect, inclose, fence in”), Swedish freda (“to cover, protect, quiet, inclose, fence in”), Icelandic friða (“to make peace, preserve”).
Verb
frith (third-person singular simple present friths, present participle frithing, simple past and past participle frithed)
- (transitive, obsolete) To protect; guard.
- (transitive, obsolete) To inclose; fence in, as a forest or park.
Etymology 3
From Middle English frith, firth (“forest, game preserve”), from Old English fyrhþe, Old English fyrhþ (“forest, sparse woodland, game preserve”), from Proto-Germanic *furhiþą, *furhiþō (“fir-wood, forest”), from Proto-Indo-European *perkʷu- (“coniferous forest, mountain forest, wooded height”). Cognate with Old High German forst, foreht (“forest”), Old Norse fýri (“pine-wood, coniferous forest”), Old English fyrh (“fir, pine”), Latin quercus (“oak”). More at forest.
Noun
frith (plural friths)
- a wood, woodland, forest; undergrowth, brushwood
Etymology 4
See firth.
Noun
frith (plural friths)
Anagrams
Scottish Gaelic
Adjective
frith
Usage notes
- Always used before the noun it qualifies.
- Usually used as a prefix.