foresta
Italian
Etymology
From Late Latin foresta.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Derived terms
- foresta pluviale (“rainforest”)
- forestale
- forestazione
- riforestazione
Related terms
Latin
Etymology
Substantivisation of Late Latin (before 1294) forestis/foresta (silva); original sense of an open plot of land over which hunting rights are reserved is first found in Carolingian texts. Possibly derived from forīs (“outside, outdoors”) or based on forensis.[1] Sometimes regarded as a borrowing from Frankish *forhist, from Proto-Germanic *furhiþą.[2]
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /foˈres.ta/, [fɔˈrɛs.ta]
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /foˈres.ta/
Noun
foresta f (genitive forestae); first declension[3]
- (Medieval Latin) wood, forest
- Homines qui manent extra forestam non veniant decetero coram justiciariis nostris
Inflection
First declension.
Case | Singular | Plural |
---|---|---|
Nominative | foresta | forestae |
Genitive | forestae | forestārum |
Dative | forestae | forestīs |
Accusative | forestam | forestās |
Ablative | forestā | forestīs |
Vocative | foresta | forestae |
Derived terms
Descendants
forestis:
- Franco-Provençal:
- Old Dauphinois: fourest
- Middle Dauphinois: [Term?] (/furɛː/)
- Dauphinois: [Term?] (/forɛ/)
- Middle Dauphinois: [Term?] (/furɛː/)
- Neuchâtelois: forêt
- Savoyard: jhör, [Term?] (/forɛ/)
- Old Dauphinois: fourest
- Old French: forest
- Franc-Comtois: fouré (Poisoux)
- Middle French: forest
- French: forêt
- Gallo: forée (Nantais), forést
- Lorrain: [Term?] (/forɛ/) (St-Maurice-sur-Moselle)
- Norman: forêt (Cotentinais, Jersiais), foiret (Brayon), fouorêt (Guernesiais)
- Picard: foreû (Athois)
- Poitevin-Saintongeais: fouras (Châtellerault), fourêt (Saintongeais)
- → Middle English: forest
- English: forest
- → Middle Irish: foraís
- Irish: foraois
- Old Occitan: forest
- Catalan: forest
- Occitan:
- Auvergnat: [Term?] (/fure/) (Puy de Dôme), foureî (Velay)
- Gascon: [Term?] (/hawrest/) (Bagnères), [Term?] (/ahurɛs/) (Bagnères-de-Bigorre), hourèst (Béarnais), ahourech (Gers), [script needed] (ahurɛs) (Gironde, Lot-et-Garonne), fourès (Vallée d’Aspe)
- Languedocien: fourèst (Toulousain), [script needed] (furɛst) (Ariègeois, Aveyron, Tarnais), forèst, [Term?] (/furɛs/)
- Limousin: [Term?] (/fure/) (Périgourdin)
- Provençal: foures (Aix), [Term?] (/furɛs/)
- Vivaro-Alpin: forest
foresta:
References
- 1882 (Brachet, Auguste) An Etymological Dictionary of the French Language: Crowned by the French Academy (in French), Clarendon Press, page 169
- “forêt” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
- foresta in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
Maltese
Spanish
Etymology
From Late Latin foresta.
Venetian
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.