frida
See also: Frida, frìda, Frída, frîda, friða, fríða, and Fríða
Emilian
Alternative forms
- frîda (Bolognese, Reggiano)
Etymology
From the feminine past participle of frìr.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: fri‧da
Noun
frida f (plural fridi)
- (Modenese) wound; twinge
Synonyms
- ṡgurbiòt (Bolognese)
- sfrîṡ (Bolognese)
- sfrîş (Reggiano)
- sfrîś (Carpigiano)
- sbuzòt (Bolognese)
- tâi (Bolognese)
- tàj (Reggiano, Carpigiano)
- ṡbrêg (Bolognese)
- śbrègh (Modenese)
- şbrêgh (Reggiano)
- śbrêg (Carpigiano)
- śbrag (Mirandolese)
Participle
frida
- (Modenese) feminine singular of frî
Esperanto
Etymology
Common Romance, from Latin frigidus.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Adjective
frida (accusative singular fridan, plural fridaj, accusative plural fridajn)
- (poetic, in compounds, neologism) cold (low in temperature)
Usage notes
Though this term is rare outside of works of poetry, the derived term fridujo is very common.
Synonyms
- malvarma
Antonyms
- varma (“warm, hot”)
- malfrida (“warm, hot”)
Derived terms
- fridujo (“refrigerator”)
Related terms
- fride (“coldly”)
- frideco (“coldness”)
- fridi (“to be cold”)
- frido (“cold”)