merrie
See also: Merrie
English
Adjective
merrie (comparative merrier, superlative merriest)
- Obsolete form of merry.
- 1889 August 21, “City Items”, in The Dayton Daily Herald, volume XII, number 21, Dayton, Ohio, page [3], column 3:
- The annual meet of the National Archery Association will take place at the Soldiers’ Home next week, commencing on the 27th. It will be a merrie meet, and all the skilled bowsmen and bowswomen in the districts are expected to compete for the admirable prizes.
- 1973 November 25, James G. Andrews, “In Merrie Olde Arkansas”, in The Commercial Appeal Mid-South Magazine, page 4:
- Crossbowmen from such distant realms as Texas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois, New York, New Jersey and Delaware, all right there in Merrie Olde Arkansas, in the non-medieval year of 1973.
- 1991, Nicholas Hagger, Selected Poems (1960-1990): A Metaphysical’s Way of Fire, Element Books, →ISBN, page 76:
- And watch this ailing Knight of a Merrie day / Extend a sagging hand and fall into a chair; […]
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch merrie, from Old Dutch *meria (compare Old High German meriha), from Proto-Germanic *marhijō. Cognate with West Frisian merje, German Mähre, English mare.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmɛ.ri/
merrie (file) - Hyphenation: mer‧rie
- Rhymes: -ɛri
Noun
merrie f (plural merries, diminutive merrietje n, masculine hengst)
- A mare, female equine (mostly horse)
Derived terms
- merriebron
- merriekachtel
- merriemelk
- merriepaard
- merrieveulen
- merriewreen
- stamboekmerrie
Related terms
Descendants
- Afrikaans: merrie
- Negerhollands: merri, mėri
See also
- nachtmerrie (not related, but connected through folk etymology)
- veulen
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