suegra

Asturian

Etymology

From Late Latin socra, from Latin socrus.

Noun

suegra f (plural suegres)

  1. mother-in-law
    La mi suegra ye la mairi'l mio maríuMy mother-in-law is the mother of my husband

Ladino

Etymology

Inherited from Old Spanish suegra (mother-in-law), from Late Latin socra, from Latin socrus, from Proto-Indo-European *sweḱrúh₂, whence German Schwieger/schwieger-.

Noun

suegra f (Hebrew spelling סואיגרה, masculine suegro)[1]

  1. mother-in-law
    • 2000, La Lettre Sépharade[1], numbers 1–19, La Lettre Sépharade, page 19:
      Dayinda no ay un dia ke me kazi, i ya me ize madre, suegra i nona!
      There still isn’t a day [when] I married, and I already became a mother, mother-in-law, and grandmother!

References

  1. ^ suegra”, in Trezoro de la Lengua Djudeoespanyola [Treasure of the Judeo-Spanish Language] (in Ladino, Hebrew, and English), Instituto Maale Adumim

Old Spanish

Etymology

Inherited from Late Latin socra, from Latin socrus, from Proto-Indo-European *sweḱrúh₂, whence German Schwieger/schwieger-.

Noun

suegra f (plural suegras)

  1. mother-in-law

Descendants

  • Ladino: suegra, סואיגרה
  • Spanish: suegra

References

  • Ralph Steele Boggs et al. (1946) “suegra”, in Tentative Dictionary of Medieval Spanish, volume II, Chapel Hill, page 483

Spanish

Etymology

Inherited from Old Spanish suegra (mother-in-law), from Late Latin socra, from Latin socrus, from Proto-Indo-European *sweḱrúh₂, whence German Schwieger/schwieger- and Russian Свекровь (Svekrovʹ).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsweɡɾa/ [ˈswe.ɣ̞ɾa]
  • Audio (Colombia):(file)
  • Rhymes: -eɡɾa
  • Syllabification: sue‧gra

Noun

suegra f (plural suegras, masculine suegro, masculine plural suegros)

  1. mother-in-law (spouse's mother)
  2. (El Salvador, historical, colloquial) one Salvadoran colón; the coin of that value
  3. heel, butt (of a loaf of bread)

Derived terms

Further reading