tafur

Old French

Etymology

Perhaps related to Arabic طفران, tafraan, meaning pauper, have-not.

Noun

tafur m (oblique plural tafurs, nominative singular tafurs, nominative plural tafur)

  1. Saracen
  2. rascal
  3. beggar

References


Old Portuguese

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Arabic تَكْفُور (takfūr, Armenian king), from Middle Armenian թագւոր (tʿagwor, king), from Old Armenian թագաւոր (tʿagawor, king), from Parthian *tag(a)-bar (king, literally crown bearing).

Cognate with Old Spanish tafur (Modern tahúr).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ta.ˈfuɾ/

Noun

tafur m

  1. gambler
    • 13th century, attributed to Alfonso X of Castile, Cantigas de Santa Maria, E codex, cantiga 154 (facsimile):
      Como un tafur tirou con hũa baeſta hũa seeta cõtra o ceo con ſanna p̈ q̇ pdera. p̃ q̃ cuidaua q̇ firia a deos o.ſ.M̃.
      How a gambler shot, with a crossbow, a bolt at the sky, wrathful because he had lost. Because he wanted it to wound God or Holy Mary.

Derived terms

  • tafuraria

Descendants

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