proud
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English proud, prout, prut, from Old English prūd, prūt (“proud, arrogant, haughty”) (compare Old English prȳtung (“pride”); prȳde, prȳte (“pride”)), probably from Old French prod, prud (“brave, gallant”) (modern French preux), from Late Latin prōde (“useful”), derived from Latin prōdesse (“to be of value”); however, the Old English umlaut derivatives prȳte, prȳtian, etc. suggest the word may be older and possibly native. Compare Old Norse prýði (“ornament; gallantry, bravery”). See also pride.
Cognate with German Low German praud, Old Norse prúðr (“gallant, brave, magnificent, stately, handsome, fine”) (Icelandic prúður, Middle Swedish prudh, Danish prud).
proud (comparative prouder or more proud, superlative proudest or most proud)
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Inherited from Old Czech prúd, from Proto-Slavic *prǭdъ.
proud m inan
From Old English prūd, prūt.
proud
From Middle English proud, from Old English prūd.
proud
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