culchet
Old French edit
Etymology 1 edit
From Latin collocātum.
Pronunciation edit
Participle edit
culchet
Etymology 2 edit
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
culchet
- third-person singular present indicative of culcher (Anglo-Norman form of couchier)
- c. 1150, Turoldus, La Chanson de Roland[1], lines 10–13:
- Li reis Marsilie esteit en Sarraguce. / Alez en est en un verger suz l'umbre; / Sur un perrun de marbre bloi se culchet, / Envirun lui plus de vint milie humes.
- The King Marsile was in Zaragoza. Arrived in a garden beneath the shade, he lays down on a large blonde [or blue] marble rock, around him more than twenty thousand man.