German

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle High German vert, from Old High German [Term?], from Proto-Germanic *ferudi, from Proto-Indo-European *peruti. Cognates include Old Norse fjǫrð (last year), Sanskrit परुत् (parut, last year), Persian پار (pâr, last year), Ancient Greek πέρυσι (pérusi, last year), Lithuanian pernai (last year) and Old Armenian հերու (heru, last year).

Adverb

edit

fert

  1. (archaic) last year
    Synonym: fernt
    Coordinate term: heuer
    • 1529, Martin Luther, “Das dritte Gebot”, in Das Große Katechismus:
      ...und wenn das jar umb ist, können sie hewer so viel als fert.
      ...and when the year is ended, they know as much this year as last year.
edit

Latin

edit

Verb

edit

fert

  1. third-person singular present active indicative of ferō

References

edit

Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Ottoman Turkish فرد (ferd), from Arabic فَرْد (fard).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

fert (definite accusative ferdi, plural fertler or efrat)

  1. (dated) person, individual
    Synonyms: kişi, birey

Declension

edit
Inflection
Nominative fert
Definite accusative ferdi
Singular Plural
Nominative fert fertler
Definite accusative ferdi fertleri
Dative ferde fertlere
Locative fertte fertlerde
Ablative fertten fertlerden
Genitive ferdin fertlerin
Predicative forms
Singular Plural
1st singular ferdim fertlerim
2nd singular fertsin fertlersin
3rd singular fert
ferttir
fertler
fertlerdir
1st plural ferdiz fertleriz
2nd plural fertsiniz fertlersiniz
3rd plural fertler fertlerdir
edit