- geostran
- m (-es/-as) yester(\geostranday/\geostrannight)
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
Old to modern English dictionary. 2013.
Yesterday — Yes ter*day, n. [OE. [yogh]isterdai, AS. geostran d[ae]g, from geostran, geostra, giestran, gistran, gystran, yesterday (akin to D. gisteren, G. gestern, OHG. gestaron, Icel. g[ae]r yesterday, to morrow, Goth. gistradagis to morrow, L. heri… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
yesterday — (n.) O.E. geostran dæg, from dæg day (see DAY (Cf. day)) + geostran yesterday, from P.Gmc. *gestra (Cf. O.H.G. gestaron, Ger. gestern yesterday, O.N. gær tomorrow, yesterday, Goth. gistradagis … Etymology dictionary
Vocabulario indoeuropeo (sustantivos) — Esta es una lista de las raíces protoindoeuropeas más comunes. En general sólo se ofrece la lengua más representativa de cada una de las ramas del indoeuropeo. Todas las palabras se muestran en su declinación más representativa. Contenido 1… … Wikipedia Español
Список праиндоевропейских корней — Для улучшения этой статьи желательно?: Найти и оформить в виде сносок ссылки на авторитетные источники, подтверждающие написанное … Википедия
dhgh(y)es- — Yesterday. Oldest form *dhg̑h(y)es , becoming *dhgh(y)es in centum languages. Suffixed (comparative) form *(dh)ghes ter . yester , yesterday, from Old English geostran, giestran, “yester ,” from Germanic *ges ter . [Pokorny g̑hđi̯és 416.] * * * … Universalium
yester- — a combining form, now unproductive, occurring in words that denote an extent of time one period prior to the present period, the nature of the period being specified by the second element of the compound: yesterweek. [ME; OE geostran, giestron; c … Universalium
yesterday — yesterdayness, n. /yes teuhr day , dee/, adv. 1. on the day preceding this day. 2. a short time ago: Yesterday your money went further. n. 3. the day preceding this day. 4. time in the immediate past. adj. 5. belonging or pertaining to the day… … Universalium
gistran — see geostran … Old to modern English dictionary
yester- — combining form literary or archaic of yesterday: yestereve. Origin OE geostran, of Gmc origin … English new terms dictionary
yester- — aff. a combining form occurring in words that denote a time one period prior to the present period, the nature of the period being specified by the second element of the compound: yesteryear[/ex] • Etymology: OE geostran, c. OHG gestre; akin to L … From formal English to slang