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Wikipedia

See also LORD, and Lord

English[]

Etymology[]

Middle English lord, loverd (lord, master, ruler) from Old English hlāford, hlāfweard (lord, master, husband), originally literally ‘loaf-guardian’, i.e. "bread-keeper".

Pronunciation[]

  • IPA: /lɔ:d/
  • noicon
    (file)
  • Rhymes: -ɔː(r)d

Noun[]

Wikipedia

Singular
Lord

Plural
{{{1}}}

Lord ({{{1}}})

  1. (obsolete) The master of a household.
  2. A person having formal authority over others, a ruler.
  3. A person enjoying great respect in a community.
    • lords of a profession
  4. An aristocrat, a man of high rank in a feudal society or in one that retains feudal forms and institutions.
  5. An owner, a master.
  6. A titled nobleman or aristocrat
  7. (familiar, dated) An affectionate term for one's boyfriend or husband.

Derived terms[]

  • warlord
  • landlord

Synonyms[]

  • (master, owner): possessor, proprietor, sovereign

See also[]

Translations[]

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Help:How to check translations.

Verb[]

Infinitive
to Lord

Third person singular
-

Simple past
-

Past participle
-

Present participle
-

to Lord (third-person singular simple present -, present participle -, simple past and past participle -)

  1. (intransitive) Domineer or act like a lord

Translations[]


Italian[]

Noun[]

Lord m. inv.

  1. lord (British aristocrat)
  2. gentleman

Spanish[]

Noun[]

Lord m. (plural lores)

Singular
Lord m.

Plural
lores m.

  1. lord (British title)

ang:lord cs:lord es:lord fa:lord fr:lord gd:lord ko:lord io:lord it:lord kn:lord ku:lord hu:lord ml:lord ja:lord pl:lord ru:lord simple:lord fi:lord sv:lord ta:lord te:lord tr:lord vi:lord zh:lord

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