sulung
See also: Sulung
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Old English sulung, from sulh (“plough, ploughland”).
Noun
sulung (plural sulungs)
- (historical) A unit of land in medieval Kent, comparable to the hide and the carucate.
- 2000, Nicholas Brooks, Anglo-Saxon Myths: State and Church, 400–1066, →ISBN, page 57:
- The counting of sulungs (as of hides) is a horrible task on which no two scholars agree, and it is not surprising that before the age of the computer Jolliffe made slips and that his desire to find eighty-sulung units sometimes overrode the evidence or the geographical probabilities.
Translations
unit of land
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Indonesian
Pronunciation
- (Standard Indonesian) IPA(key): /ˈsuluŋ/ [ˈsu.lʊŋ]
- Rhymes: -uluŋ
- Syllabification: su‧lung
Etymology 1
- Inherited from Malay sulung (“firstborn”).
- Semantic loan from Javanese ꦱꦸꦭꦸꦁ (sulung, “small flying ant which comes out at night”, literally “earliest; eldest”).
Noun
sulung (plural sulung-sulung)
- firstborn, born first in a family
- (uncountable, chiefly Christianity) firstfruit, firstfruits: an offering of the first of the harvest
- (countable) small flying ant which comes out at night
Derived terms
- kesulungan
Related terms
Etymology 2
Borrowed from Buginese [Term?].
Verb
sulung
Further reading
- “sulung” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Javanese
Romanization
sulung
- romanization of ꦱꦸꦭꦸꦁ
Kapampangan
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsuluŋ/ [ˈsuː.luŋ]
Verb
súlung
- to advance