Flanders
English
Etymology
From French Flandres, from Dutch Vlaanderen pl, from Middle Dutch Vlander, from Old Frisian, from Proto-Germanic *flaumdra (“waterlogged land”), from *flaumaz (“flowing, current (water)”) (compare Old High German weraltfloum (“transitoriness of life”), Old Norse flaumr (“eddy”)), from Proto-Indo-European *plow-m- (“flow”) (compare Ancient Greek πλῠ́μα (plúma, “dishwater, washing water”)). More at flow. "Waterlogged" refers to the mudflats and salt marshes common to coastal Flanders.
Proper noun
Flanders
- (historical) The County of Flanders, of varying extent.
- 1613, William Shakespeare, Hen VIII iii 2
- When you went / Ambassador to the Emperor, you made bold / To carry into Flanders the great seal.
- 1613, William Shakespeare, Hen VIII iii 2
- A subnational state in the north of federal Belgium, the institutional merger of a territorial region and the Dutch language 'community' which also has/shares some authority in the capital region Brussels.
- Two provinces in Belgian Flanders: (West-Flanders and East-Flanders).
- Short for French Flanders, a former province of the French kingdom on territory taken from the above countship, now constituting the French department Nord.
- The principal railway station in Lille, capital of the above.
- A surname.
Related terms
- East-Flanders
- Flandrian
- Flemish
- French Flanders
- Imperial Flanders
- West-Flanders
- Zeelandic Flanders
Translations
subnational state in the north of federal Belgium
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historical county
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two provinces in Belgium
former province and region of northern France
- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
Translations to be checked
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