Queene
Appearance
English
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]Queene
German
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Low German Quene, from Middle Low German quēne (“old woman, hag”), from Old Saxon quena, from Proto-West Germanic *kwenā (“woman”).
The sense probably developed from “barren cow” (cf. Dutch kween, also attested in Low German dialects) via “calfless cow” to “young cow”. Doublet of Kone, which was inherited.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]Queene f (genitive Queene, plural Queenen)
- (Northern Germany, archaic or dialectal) heifer (young cow that has not calved)
- Synonym: Färse
- 1774, Justus Claproth, Ohnmasgeblicher Versuch eines Gesetzbuches – Erste Fortsetzung welche das Criminal-Recht enthält, Frankfurt am Main, page 9:
- Ob er nicht gleichfalls dem Hinrich Hüllen zu Stenau [sic] eine Queene von der Weide in Gesellschaft des Inquisiten Hinrichs entwendet?
- [The defendant should be asked] whether he had not likewise stolen a heifer from Hinrich Hüllen’s pasture in Steinau in the presence of [fellow] defendant Hinrichs.
Declension
[edit]Categories:
- English lemmas
- English proper nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- English obsolete forms
- German terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- German terms borrowed from Low German
- German terms derived from Low German
- German terms derived from Middle Low German
- German terms derived from Old Saxon
- German terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- German doublets
- German 2-syllable words
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German lemmas
- German nouns
- German feminine nouns
- Northern German
- German terms with archaic senses
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