loope
English
Noun
loope (plural loopes)
- Obsolete form of loop.
- quoted in 1968, Walter E. Minchinton, Essays in Agrarian History (volume 1, page 170)
- […] and he that holds the plow drives them with two whip cords fastened to the fore horses and hung by two loopes upon each of his plough handles […]
- quoted in 1968, Walter E. Minchinton, Essays in Agrarian History (volume 1, page 170)
Anagrams
Central Franconian
Alternative forms
- laafe (southern Moselle Franconian)
- laufe, loufe (Kölsch; Westerwald)
- loofe (Ripuarian; northern Moselle Franconian)
Etymology
A relict from the older Low Franconian dialect around Düsseldorf, thus from Old Dutch lōpan, from Proto-West Germanic *hlaupan. The city and its south-western periphery underwent a process of Ripuarianisation, chiefly during the 19th century.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /loːpə/
Verb
loope (third-person singular present lööp, past tense leep, past participle jeloope)
- (northernmost Ripuarian) to walk; to go; to run (move on foot, either at a normal or an increased speed)
- 1956, “De Retematäng”[1]performed by Jupp Schäfers:
- Mir sinn us de alde Stadt, us de Retematäng.
Mir sprääche richtig Platt un loope op de Häng.- We are from the old city, from the “rue de matin”.
We speak the original dialect and we walk on our hands.
- We are from the old city, from the “rue de matin”.
Fula
Noun
loope ɗe
References
- Tourneux, Henry, Daïrou, Yaya (1998) Dictionnaire peul de l'agriculture et de la nature (Diamaré, Cameroun), suivi d'un index français-fulfulde[2] (in French), Paris: Karthala, →ISBN, retrieved 24 April 2023
Saterland Frisian
Verb
loope
- alternative spelling of lope