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Etymology Dictionary

Origin and Etymology of the word GANDER.

From An Etymology Dictionary of the English Language, by Walter W. Skeat, 1893

 

GANDER,  the male of the goose.  (E.)   M.E. gandre, Mandeville's Travels, p. 216.—A.S. gandra; Ælfric's Gram. De Tertia Declinatione, sect. xviii; where it translates Lat. anser.   Also spelt ganra, Wright's Vocab. i. 77, col. 1. + G. gänser-ich, with an additional suffix.   β. The d is excrescent, as in thunder, and as usual after n; gandra stands for the older gan-ra.   γ. And the suffix -ra is the Aryan -ra, as in the Goth. ak-ra- = Lat. ag-ro- = Gk. ἀγ-ρό- (the crude forms corresponding to E. acre); Schleicher, Compend. pp. 404, 405.   See further under Goose; and see Gannet.

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Etymology Dictionary Index
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

Key
Arab.=Arabic.
A.S.=Anglo Saxon.
Bavar.=Bavarian
Bohem.=Bohemian.
C.=Celtic, used as a general term for Irish, Gaelic, Welsh, Breton, Cornish, &c.
Corn.=Cornish.
Dan.=Danish.
Du.=Dutch
E.=English.
E.E.=Early English.
Europ.=European.
F.=French.
G.=German.
Gk.=Greek.
Goth.=Gothic.
Icel.=Icelandic.
Ital.=Italian.
L. or Lat.=Latin.
Lith. & Lithuan.=Lithuanian.
M.E.=Middle English.
M.F.=Middle French
M.H.G.=Middle High German.
Norw.=Norwegian.
O.F.=Old French.
O.H.G.=Old High German.
Pers.=Persian.
Port.=Portuguese.
Scand.=Scandinavian, used as a general term for Icelandic, Swedish, Danish, &c.
Sc.=Scottish.
Skt.=Sanskrit.
Span.=Spanish.
Swed.=Sweish.
Teut.=Teutonic
Turk.=Turkish.
W.=Welsh.

  

 

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