fædrene
Appearance
Danish
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Noun
[edit]fædrene c
Etymology 2
[edit]From Old Danish fædherne, from the noun fæþrini, Old Norse faðerni (“paternal side”), derived from Proto-Germanic *fadrīnaz (“paternal”).
Adjective
[edit]fædrene (neuter fædrene, plural and definite singular attributive fædrene)
- ancestral
- 1836, Homer, translated by Christian Wilster, The Iliad, page 148:
- Her har du hentet din Død, og til Verden du kom ved Gygaias / Søe, der ligger din fædrene Gaard, dine fædrene Jorder / Hist ved den fiskrige Hyllos og Hermos's rivende Vande.
- Here you got your death, and to the world you came by Gygaia's / Lake, there lies your ancestral farm, your ancestral lands / By the fish-rich Hyllos and the coursing waters of Hermos.