placard
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English placard (“official document”), from Middle French placard, placart, plaquart (“a placard, a writing pasted on a wall”), from the Old French verb plaquer, plaquier (“to stick or paste, roughcast”), from Middle Dutch placken, plecken (“to glue or fasten, plaster, patch”), ultimately from Proto-Germanic *plaggą (“a piece of cloth, patch”), equivalent to plaque + -ard.
Related to Middle Low German placken (“to smear with lime or clay, plaster”), Saterland Frisian Plak, Plakke (“a hit, smack, slap”), German Placken (“a spot, patch”), Icelandic plagg (“a document”), Hebrew פלקט (“'plakat' a large sheet of paper, typically with a photo or writing, posted on the wall”), English play. Compare also Modern Dutch plakkaat (“placard”), Saterland Frisian Plakoat (“a placard, poster”). More at play.
placard (plural placards)
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placard (third-person singular simple present placards, present participle placarding, simple past and past participle placarded)
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Inherited from Old French derivative of plaquer (“to stick, to affix”). By surface analysis, plaque + -ard.
placard m (plural placards)
placard m (plural placards)
Unadapted borrowing from French placard.
placard m (plural placards)
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