farrand
See also: Farrand
English
    
    Alternative forms
    
- farand, farant, farent, farrant, farren
 
Etymology
    
From Middle English farand, farende, farinde, from Old English farende (present participle of Old English faran (“to set forth, go, travel, wander, proceed”)), from Proto-Germanic *farandz, present participle of Proto-Germanic *faraną (“to go, fare, travel”), equivalent to fare + -and. More at fare.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): [ˈfæɹənd], [ˈfæɹənt]
 
Adjective
    
farrand
- (obsolete, Scotland, Ireland, Northern England) Having a specified form or disposition; fashioned.
- 1660, Dickson, Writings:
- A sore matter for a sinner to be corrected, and yet to go light-farrand under it.
 
 - 1756, William Hamilton, A New Edition of the Life and Heroick Actions of the renoun'd Sir William Wallace, etc.:
- Likely he was, right fair and well farrand, Manly and stout, […]
 
 - 1836, Richard Furness, Medicus-magus:
- My farand friends farewell ! so near my heart, / My dowsome cow, my good old mare, and cart !
 
 - 1893, K. Snowden, Tales of the Yorkshire Wolds:
- When, four years before, Ainsworth took land next his own and rebuilt the farmstead "on a new-farrand plan," he had felt a secret irk against him, […]
 
 
 
Derived terms
    
References
    
- Wright, Joseph (1900) The English Dialect Dictionary, volume 2, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pages 301–302
 
Scots
    
    Alternative forms
    
- farrant, farrent, farren, faurond, farn
 
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