martre
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From German martern (“to torment”), derived from Marter (“torture”), borrowed via Late Latin martyrium (“martyrdom”) from Ancient Greek μαρτύριον (martúrion, “testimony”).
martre (imperative martr, infinitive at martre, present tense martrer, past tense martrede, perfect tense har martret)
From Frankish *marþra (“marten”), from Proto-Germanic *marþuz, from Proto-Indo-European *martus (“bride”). X. Delamarre (2003) in Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise proposes a connection to Gaulish martalos via a "crossed-etymology".
martre f (plural martres)
martre
From Frankish *martar.
martre f (plural martres)
From a Middle Low German cognate to Middle High German martern, marteren (“torture”).
martre (present tense martrer, past tense martra or martret, past participle martra or martret)
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