An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/fremd

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search

fremd, adjective, ‘strange, foreign, unfamiliar, peculiar,’ from Middle High German vręmede, vręmde, ‘foreign, distant, strange, singular, rare,’ Old High German framadi, fręmidi, ‘foreign, singular’; a common Teutonic adjective for ‘foreign,’ unknown only to Scandinavian; compare Gothic framaþs, ‘foreign, estranged, excluded from,’ Anglo-Saxon fręmþe, fręmde, ‘foreign, alien, estranged’ (English obsolete), Old Saxon fręmithi, Dutch vreemd. A derivative of the stem appearing in the Gothic preposition fram, ‘far from,’ Anglo-Saxon and English from, Old High German fram, adverb, ‘away, forward.’