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The early thirteenth-century Anglo-Latin word camew (sometimes spelled chamehieux) meant "carved precious stone with two layers of colors." It is believed to be derived from Old French camaieu, which, in turn, was derived from Medieval Latin cammaeus.
It is a male name of Breton and Irish origin. It may have derived from an old Celtic word meaning high or noble.
Portmanteau' is an old-fashioned word for a suitcase or trunk that opens in two parts. Its origins are from the French word meaning to carry.
In French Cowboys is cow-boyThat's true that use the American word, but the French word is "vacher" from vache = cow. It was used in French countryside in the old days for the boys in charge of the herd of cows.** un vacheur (une vacheuse- cowgirl)-Isabelle
'Franc' orignally comes from the tribe name 'franks' , which meant 'free' in their Germanic language. It gave the words France (land of the Franks), français (French), franchise (same word in English).
Originally it derived from French languages. :)
The word "safety" originated from the Old French word "saufte," which derived from the Latin word "salvus," meaning "free from harm."
The word duty is derived - through Middle-English - from the Anglo-Norman French word deute -> which in turn is derived from the Old-French word deu meaning "owed". That word derived from the Latin word debitus.
City is derived from the Middle English word cite, which is derived from the Old French word cité, which is derived from the Latin word cīvitās.
Our english word 'entry' is derived from the Middle English word 'entre', which in turn is derived from the Old French word 'entree'; the Old French word 'entree' is further extracted from its own feminine past participle, 'entrer'.
The word "autumn" comes from the Old French word "autompne," which is derived from the Latin word "autumnus."
The word 'hotel' is not an abbreviation, it is the full form.It is derived from the French word 'hôtel', which is itself derived from the old French 'hostel'. This is the same word from which we get the English words 'hospitality' and 'host'.
The word 'hotel' is not an abbreviation, it is the full form.It is derived from the French word 'hôtel', which is itself derived from the old French 'hostel'. This is the same word from which we get the English words 'hospitality' and 'host'.
LATE 14th Century Old French derived from Latin, derived from Old Latin, derived from Porot-Latin "gnoscere", meaning "to know".
It started as being known as 'the Magnesian Stone' from Magnesia, a region in Thessaly where the ore was obtained The word spread from Latin to most European countries as magnet, magneet or magnete. The origins are sometime before the 1400's when both the Latin and Greek word was 'magneta'
"Correspond" is derived from the Old French word "correspondre," which in turn comes from the Latin word "corresponder," meaning "to be in agreement or harmony with."
Roshell is not a French word. The closest French noun is 'la Rochelle', the name of a town and port on the Atlantic ocean. That name is derived from the old French word for 'rock'.