mers
EnglishEdit
NounEdit
mers
AnagramsEdit
CatalanEdit
AdjectiveEdit
mers
FrenchEdit
PronunciationEdit
Audio (file)
NounEdit
mers f
Old FrenchEdit
Alternative formsEdit
- merz (common)
EtymologyEdit
NounEdit
mers f (oblique plural mers, nominative singular mers, nominative plural mers)
- 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.
- The ship was strong and beautiful and big,
RomanianEdit
EtymologyEdit
From the verb merge, Latin mersus.
VerbEdit
mers (past participle of merge)
- past participle of merge
NounEdit
mers n (plural mersuri)