Middle French edit

Etymology edit

Old French titre, with the l added back to reflect the Latin titulus.

Noun edit

tiltre m (plural tiltres)

  1. title (name given to something)

Descendants edit

  • French: titre
    • English: titer, titre
    • Romanian: titru
    • Turkish: titr
    • Vietnamese: tít

Norwegian Bokmål edit

Etymology edit

From older tiltrede, probably from Danish tiltræde, from Middle Low German treden.

Verb edit

tiltre (imperative tiltre, present tense tiltrer, passive tiltres, simple past tiltrådte, past participle tiltrådt, present participle tiltredende)

  1. to enter into / upon, take over or take up (a position), step into, embark upon, start (a journey)

Derived terms edit

References edit

Norwegian Nynorsk edit

Etymology edit

From Middle Low German treden, presumably via Norwegian Bokmål.

Verb edit

tiltre (present tense tiltrer, past tense tiltredde, past participle tiltredd or tiltrett, passive infinitive tiltreast, present participle tiltreande, imperative tiltre)

  1. to enter into / upon, take over or take up (a position), step into, embark upon, start (a journey)

References edit