See also: MERS and Mers

EnglishEdit

NounEdit

mers

  1. plural of mer

AnagramsEdit

CatalanEdit

AdjectiveEdit

mers

  1. masculine plural of mer

FrenchEdit

PronunciationEdit

  • (file)

NounEdit

mers f

  1. plural of mer

Old FrenchEdit

Alternative formsEdit

EtymologyEdit

Latin merx.

NounEdit

mers f (oblique plural mers, nominative singular mers, nominative plural mers)

  1. merchandise (goods intended to be sold)
    • late 12th century, anonymous, La Folie de Tristan d'Oxford, page 354 (of the Champion Classiques edition of Le Roman de Tristan, →ISBN, lines 67-70:
      La nef ert fort e belle e grande,
      bone cum cele k'ert markande.
      De plusurs mers chargee esteit,
      en Engleterre curre devait.
      The ship was strong and beautiful and big,
      good like a merchant's ship
      loaded with lots of different type of merchandise
      ready to set sail to England.

RomanianEdit

EtymologyEdit

From the verb merge, Latin mersus.

VerbEdit

mers (past participle of merge)

  1. past participle of merge

NounEdit

mers n (plural mersuri)

  1. going, walking, movement
  2. pace, gait

SynonymsEdit