EuroLex/F/Dinner
< EuroLex
- Original language: French
- Original form and meaning: dîner - 1. dinner (meaning: the chief meal of the day, eaten in the evening or at midday)
(Note: If the status is not specifically indicated then the word is stylistically neutral and generally used; if earlier meaning and status equals current use the former may be expressed by writing "dito". Cf. also the project guidelines.)
Language | Form | Date of Borrowing (and Obsolescence) | Current Meaning and Status | Earlier Meanings and Statusses | Source |
Catalan | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Croatian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Czech | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Danish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Dutch | diner | ... | 'a banquet or formal meal in honor of a person or event' | '...' | ... |
English | dinner | 13c | 'meaning 1;
and also: a) a banquet or formal meal in honor of a person or event; b) the food prepared for a meal or banquet; c) a full-course meal served at a fixed price, table d'hôte' | '...' | http://www.etymonline.com |
Estonian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Finnish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
French | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Frisian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
German | Diner, Dinner | ... | 'a banquet or formal meal in honor of a person or event;
a full-course meal served at a fixed price, table d'hôte' | '...' | ... |
Hungarian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Irish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Italian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Latvian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Lithuanian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Maltese | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Norwegian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Polish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Portuguese | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Rumantsch | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Slovak | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Slovenian | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Spanish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Swedish | ... | ... | '...' | '...' | ... |
Annotations
editEtymology: from OF disner, originally "breakfast", later "lunch", noun use of infinitive disner, from stem of Gallo-Romance *desjunare "to break one's fast", from L dis- "undo" + LL jejunare "to fast", from L jejunus "fasting, hungry"
Source: http://www.etymonline.com