See also: פֿאָרם

Yiddish edit

Etymology edit

From English farm, from Middle English ferme, farme (rent, revenue), influenced by Anglo-Norman ferme (rent, lease, farm), from Medieval Latin ferma, firma. Both from Old English feorm, fearm, farm (provision), from Proto-Germanic *fermō (means of living, subsistence), from *ferhwō, *ferhuz (life force, body, being), from Proto-Indo-European *perkʷ- (life, force, strength, tree).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

פֿאַרם (farmf, plural פֿאַרמען (farmen)

  1. farm (place where agricultural activities take place)