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1 FAÐIR
(gen., dat. and acc. föður, pl. feðr), m. father.* * *m., gen. dat. and acc. föður: pl. nom. and acc. feðr, gen. feðra, dat. feðrum; there also occurs a monosyllabic nom. föðr or feðr, gen. föðrs or feðrs, dat. and acc. föðr or feðr, the pl. as in faðir; this form occurs passim in MSS. and editions, but is less correct and quite obsolete, Eg. 178, Fms. i. 6, N. G. L. i. 52, Stj. 130: in mod. usage in gen. both föður and föðurs, better föðrs: feðr nd veðr are rhymed, Edda 95; cp. also the compds all-föðr (of Odin), but Al-faðir of God in mod. usage: [Goth. fadar; A. S. fader; Early Engl. fader, mod. father; O. H. G. fatar, mod. vater; Swed.-Dan. fader; Lat. pāter; Gr. πατήρ; all of them bisyllabic]:—a father, N. G. L. i. 30, Grág. i. 170, Stj. 71, Hom. 47, passim:—in eccl. sense, Lat. pater, a father of the church, Stj. 126; speki feðra, Eluc. 2, K. Á. 30; faðir ok forstjóri, father and ruler, Mar.:—God, heavenly Father, N. T.; Foðir Vor, Our Father (i. e. the Lord’s Prayer, Lat. Pater Noster). Proverb or saying, fleygir fúsum til föður húsa, swift is the ride towards a father’s house.COMPDS: föðurafi, föðurarfr, föðurbani, Föðurbetringr, föðurbróðir, föðurbætr, föðurdauði, föðurdráp, föðurerfð, föðurfaðir, föðurfrændi, föðurgarðr, föðurgjöld, föðurhefndir, föðurhús, föðurkyn, föðurland, föðurlauss, föðurleifð, föðurliga, föðurmóðir, föðursystir, föðurverringr, föðurætt.II. in many COMPDS used as adj., e. g. föður-ást, f. and föður-elska, u, f. fatherly love; föður-hendr, f. pl. fatherly hands; föður-hirting, f. fatherly punishment; föður-hjarta, n. fatherly heart.2. guð-faðir, a god-father; tengda-faðir, a father-in-law; stjúp-faðir, a step-father; fóstr-faðir, a foster-father; al-faðir, all-father.
См. также в других словарях:
fader — ● fader verbe transitif (provençal fadar, enchanter, de fada, fée) Populaire. Servir copieusement quelqu un de quelque chose, lui donner son compte : Ils m ont fadé de six mois de taule. ⇒FADER, verbe trans. Arg. [Correspond à fade2] A. Partager… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Fader — Fa der, n. Father. [Obs.] Chaucer. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Fader — [ feidə] der; s, <zu engl. to fade, vgl. ↑Fading> Zusatzeinrichtung an CD Playern, mit der man Musiktitel stufenlos ein bzw. ausblenden kann … Das große Fremdwörterbuch
fader — sound control device, 1931, agent noun from FADE (Cf. fade) … Etymology dictionary
fader — *fader, *fadar germ., Maskulinum (konsonantisch): nhd. Vater; ne. father (Maskulinum); Rekontruktionsbasis: got., an., ae., afries., anfrk., as., ahd.; Etym … Germanisches Wörterbuch
Fader — Article principal : Table de mixage. Un fader, (anglicisme), est un potentiomètre linéaire[1], atténuateur passif dont l excursion (ou la course) est logarithmique ou linéaire[2]. Sommaire … Wikipédia en Français
fader — n. We say someone fades from our memory. A fader dissolves from the world itself. A fader is someone who does not seem to exist though the fader is still there, no one in the world wants to recognize that fact. Plural is faders, and indicates… … Dictionary of american slang
fader — n. We say someone fades from our memory. A fader dissolves from the world itself. A fader is someone who does not seem to exist though the fader is still there, no one in the world wants to recognize that fact. Plural is faders, and indicates… … Dictionary of american slang
Fader — Recorded as Fader, Vader and Vater, this is a medieval surname but of much earlier Norse and later Germanic origins. Whilst the name literally translates as father , it is very unlikely that this was the original meaning. It was almost certainly… … Surnames reference
Fader — Schaltzeichen für ein Potentiometer alternatives Schaltzeichen für ein Potentiometer … Deutsch Wikipedia
fader — v.i. Partager (un butin, des bénéfices, des frais, un écot, une maladie). □ v.t. Se faire fader, contracter une maladie vénérienne … Dictionnaire du Français argotique et populaire