The town was named after a prominent cotton-mill owner, Francis Henry Fries. The surname is converged from both Friesland and French friche (“fallow land”), found in Swiss French.
Fries
From Middle Dutch Friese, but also Vriese, Vrese, from Old Dutch *Frieso, probably via Old Saxon *Frēso. Borrowed and re-borrowed, at varying times in history, from Old Frisian Frēsa, Frīsa (modern West Frisian Fries). Probably ultimately from Proto-Germanic *frisaz (“curly, frizzy”), named for their curly hair. Also compare Latin Frisii.
Initial v- is expected from natural development from Old Dutch, in which voicing of initial f- to v- occurs naturally. The modern form with f- is probably influenced by the Frisian endonym. However, the original voiced consonant is retained in the common surname de Vries.
Fries m (plural Friezen, diminutive Friesje n, feminine Friese)
In the Netherlands, Fries most often refers implicitly to the Frisians with whom Dutch people are most familiar, the West Frisians. Note that the general meaning of Dutch West-Fries refers to the region in North Holland.
From Fries + -s.
Fries (comparative Frieser, superlative meest Fries or Friest)
Declension of Fries | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
uninflected | Fries | |||
inflected | Friese | |||
comparative | Frieser | |||
positive | comparative | superlative | ||
predicative/adverbial | Fries | Frieser | het Friest het Frieste | |
indefinite | m./f. sing. | Friese | Friesere | Frieste |
n. sing. | Fries | Frieser | Frieste | |
plural | Friese | Friesere | Frieste | |
definite | Friese | Friesere | Frieste | |
partitive | Fries | Friesers | — |
Fries n
Borrowed from French frise, from an Upper Italian fris f.
Fries m (strong, genitive Frieses, plural Friese)
From Old Frisian Frīsa, Frēsa, probably ultimately from Proto-Germanic *frisaz (“curly, frizzy”), named for their curly hair.
Fries c (plural Friezen)