English
Etymology
Early 14 c., from Old French forteresce, forteresse, forterece (“strong place, fortification”), variant of fortelesse, from Medieval Latin fortalitia, from Latin fortis (“strong”) (see fort) + -itia, added to adjectives to form nouns of quality or condition. French -ess, from Latin -itia is also in words such as duress, largesse and riches. For change of medial -l- to -r- in Old French, compare orne (“elm”) from ulmus; chartre from cartula and chapitre from capitulum. First attested in the 12th century.
Pronunciation
Noun
fortress (plural fortresses)
- A fortified place; a large and permanent fortification, sometimes including a town; for example a fort, a castle; a stronghold; a place of defense or security.
1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 160:Like the Mesolithic age of 10,000-8000 B.C., the period 6000-4000 B.C. seems to be one of the fall of fortresses and the rise of pastoral nomadism.
- (chess) A position that, if obtained by the weaker side, will prevent penetration by the opposing side, generally achieving a draw.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
fortified place
- Ainu: チャシ (chashi)
- Albanian: kala (sq) f, fortesë (sq) f
- Arabic: قَلْعَة f (qalʕa), حِصْن (ar) m (ḥiṣn)
- Moroccan Arabic: قلعة f (qalʕa)
- Armenian: ամրոց (hy) (amrocʻ), բերդ (hy) (berd)
- Aromanian: tsitati f, grãditã f
- Azerbaijani: qala (az)
- Belarusian: крэ́пасць f (krépascʹ), фартэ́цыя f (fartécyja), цвердзь f (cvjerdzʹ), фартэ́ца f (fartéca)
- Bengali: দুর্গ (bn) (durgo), কেল্লা (bn) (kella), কোট (bn) (kōṭ)
- Bulgarian: кре́пост (bg) f (krépost)
- Burmese: ခံမြို့ (my) (hkammrui.), ခံတပ် (my) (hkamtap)
- Catalan: fortalesa (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 要塞 (zh) (yàosài), 城堡 (zh) (chéngbǎo), 堡壘 / 堡垒 (zh) (bǎolěi)
- Classical Nahuatl: yāōcalli
- Czech: pevnost (cs) f
- Danish: fæstning (da) c
- Dutch: vesting (nl) f, fort (nl) n
- Dzongkha: རྫོང (rdzong)
- Erzya: кемечикудо (kemečikudo)
- Esperanto: fortreso, fortiko
- Estonian: kindlus
- Finnish: linnoitus (fi)
- French: forteresse (fr) f
- Galician: forte (gl) m, fortaleza (gl) f
- Georgian: ციხესიმაგრე (cixesimagre)
- German: Festung (de) f
- Gothic: 𐌱𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌲𐍃 f (baurgs)
- Greek: φρούριο (el) n (froúrio)
- Ancient: φρούριον n (phroúrion), ὀχύρωμα n (okhúrōma)
- Hebrew: מִבְצָר (he) m (mivtsár), מְצוּדָה (he) f (m'tzudá)
- Hindi: गढ़ी (hi) (gaṛhī), क़िला m (qilā), दुर्ग (hi) m (durg)
- Hungarian: vár, erőd (hu), erődítmény (hu)
- Icelandic: virki n
- Ido: fortreso (io)
- Ingrian: kreeposti
- Irish: dún
- Italian: fortezza (it) f, rocca (it) f
- Japanese: 要塞 (ja) (ようさい, yōsai), 城塞 (ja) (じょうさい, jōsai)
- Kalmyk: шивә (şivä)
- Karakalpak: qorg'an
- Kazakh: бекініс (bekınıs), қамал (qamal)
- Khmer: បន្ទាយ (km) (bɑntiəy)
- Korean: 요새(要塞) (ko) (yosae), 성새(城塞) (seongsae)
- Kurdish:
- Central Kurdish: قەڵا (ckb) (qella)
- Northern Kurdish: birc (ku), kelhe (ku)
- Kyrgyz: сепил (ky) (sepil)
- Lao: ປ້ອມ (pǭm), ບຸລະ (bu la)
- Latin: castrum (la) n, castellum (la) n, arx (la) f
- Latvian: cietoksnis m
- Lithuanian: tvirtovė f
- Macedonian: твр́дина f (tvŕdina), ка́ле n (kále), кре́пост f (krépost)
- Malay: kubu (ms), benteng (ms)
- Maranao: ilian
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: цайз (mn) (cajz), хэрэм (mn) (xerem)
- Norman: fortéresse f (Jersey)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: festning m or f
- Nynorsk: festning f or m
- Occitan: fortalesa (oc) f
- Old English: fæsten n
- Ottoman Turkish: حصار (hisar), حصن (hısn), قلعه (kalʼe), كرمان (kerman, kirman), قسطل (kastel)
- Pashto: قلعه (ps) m (qal'á)
- Persian:
- Dari: دِژ (diž), قَلْعَه (qal'a)
- Iranian Persian: دِژ (dež), قَلْعِه (ġal'e)
- Polish: forteca (pl) f, twierdza (pl) f, warownia (pl) f
- Portuguese: fortaleza (pt) f
- Potawatomi: wakaigin
- Quechua: pukara
- Romanian: cetate (ro) f, fortăreață (ro) f
- Russian: кре́пость (ru) f (krépostʹ)
- Sanskrit: पुरा (sa) (purā), दुर्ग (sa) m (durga), पुरी (sa) f (purī)
- Scots: fortress
- Scottish Gaelic: dùn m
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: твр̀ђава f, у̏тврда f, тврђа f
- Roman: tvr̀đava (sh) f, ȕtvrda (sh) f, tvȑđa (sh) f
- Shona: svingo
- Slovak: pevnosť f, tvrdza m
- Slovene: utrdba (sl) f
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: grod m
- Spanish: fortaleza (es) f
- Swedish: fästning (sv) c
- Tajik: қалъа (qal'a), диж (tg) (diž)
- Tamil: கோட்டை (ta) (kōṭṭai)
- Tashelhit: ⵜⴰⴳⴰⴷⵉⵔⵜ f (tagadirt)
- Tatar: кальга (tt) (qal’ga)
- Thai: ป้อม (th) (bpɔ̂m), ปราการ (th) (bpraa-gaan)
- Turkish: kale (tr), hisar (tr)
- Turkmen: gala
- Ukrainian: форте́ця (uk) f (fortécja), крі́пость f (krípostʹ), тверди́ня f (tverdýnja)
- Urdu: قِلْعَہ m (qil'a), قَلْعَہ m (qal'a)
- Uyghur: قەلئە (qel'e)
- Uzbek: qalʻa
- Vietnamese: pháo đài (vi)
- Welsh: caer (cy) f
- Yiddish: פֿעסטונג f (festung)
- Zhuang: yausai
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See also
Verb
fortress (third-person singular simple present fortresses, present participle fortressing, simple past and past participle fortressed)
- (transitive) To furnish with a fortress or with fortresses; to guard, to fortify.