of-

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See also: of, OF, Of-, OF., óf, òf, and ôf

Icelandic

Etymology

From Old Norse of-.

Prefix

of-

  1. too much, excessively, hyper-

Derived terms

See also

Luxembourgish

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *aba- (away, away from), from Proto-Indo-European *apo- (off, away). Cognate with Old Saxon af-, Old Norse af-, Gothic 𐌰𐍆- (af-), English off-; and with Latin ab-, Ancient Greek ἀπο- (apo-).

Pronunciation

Prefix

of-

  1. off, away from

Derived terms

Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English of-, af-, and Old Norse af-.

Pronunciation

Prefix

of-

  1. away from; off

Descendants

  • English: off-
  • Scots: aff-, af-

References

Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *aba- (away, away from), from Proto-Indo-European *apo- (off, away). Cognate with Old Saxon af-, Old Norse af-, Gothic 𐌰𐍆- (af-), Old High German ab; and with Latin ab-, Ancient Greek ἀπο- (apo-).

Pronunciation

Prefix

of-

  1. off, away, from, out of, away from
    ofgānto exact
    ofmunanto call to mind
    ofġiefanto give up, surrender
  2. down
    ofdælea descent, decline
  3. excessively, negatively
    ofēhtanto persecute
    ofdrincanto intoxicate
  4. for, for the purpose of
    ofclipianto call for, request

Usage notes

  • of- is the unstressed form of the stressed prefix æf-.

Derived terms

Descendants