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English
Etymology
From Middle English serf, from Old French serf, from Latin servus (“slave, serf, servant”).
Pronunciation
Noun
serf (plural serfs)
- A partially free peasant of a low hereditary class, attached like a slave to the land owned by a feudal lord and required to perform labour, enjoying minimal legal or customary rights.
- A similar agricultural labourer in 18th and 19th century Europe.
- (strategy games) A worker unit.
- Synonyms: peasant, peon, villager
Derived terms
Translations
semifree peasant
- Albanian: shërbëtor (sq), rëmër
- Arabic: قِنّ m (qinn)
- Armenian: ճորտ (hy) (čort)
- Belarusian: прыго́нны m (pryhónny), прыго́нная f (pryhónnaja)
- Bulgarian: кре́постник m (krépostnik), кре́постничка f (krépostnička), кре́постен се́лянин m (kréposten séljanin)
- Burmese: မြေကျွန် (my) (mre-kywan)
- Catalan: serf (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 農奴 / 农奴 (zh) (nóngnú)
- Czech: nevolník (cs) m
- Danish: livegen c
- Dutch: horige (nl), laat (nl), lijfeigene (nl), serf m or f
- Erzya: модаре m (modaŕe), модарява f (modaŕava)
- Estonian: pärisori
- Finnish: maaorja (fi)
- French: serf (fr) m
- Galician: servo m
- Georgian: please add this translation if you can
- German: Leibeigener m
- Greek: δουλοπάροικος (el) m (doulopároikos), (historical) κολλίγας m (kollígas)
- Ancient: θής m (thḗs), θῆσσα f (thêssa)
- Hebrew: צמית (he) m (tsamit), אריס (he) m (aris)
- Hungarian: jobbágy (hu)
- Ingrian: krepostnoi
- Irish: seirfeach m, daoirseach m, daor m (familiar)
- Old Irish: dóer m
- Italian: servo della gleba m
- Japanese: 農奴 (ja) (のうど, nōdo), 小作人 (ja) (こさくにん, kosakunin)
- Korean: 농노(農奴) (ko) (nongno)
- Latin: colōnus (Medieval Latin)
- Macedonian: кмет m (kmet), закре́постен се́ланец m (zakréposten sélanec), кре́посен се́ланец m (kréposen sélanec)
- Maori: rōpā, poroteke
- Middle English: servaunt
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: leilending m, livegen
- Nynorsk: leiglending m, liveigen
- Occitan: sèrf (oc) m
- Polish: chłop pańszczyźniany m, kmieć (pl) m
- Portuguese: servo (pt) m
- Romanian: iobag (ro) m, șerb (ro) m
- Russian: крепостно́й (ru) m (krepostnój), крепостна́я (ru) f (krepostnája), холо́п (ru) m (xolóp) (also pejorative)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: кме̏т m, кмѐтица f
- Roman: kmȅt (sh) m, kmètica (sh) f
- Slovak: nevoľník m
- Slovene: tlačan m
- Spanish: siervo (es) m
- Swedish: livegen (sv)
- Tatar: кол (tt) (qol)
- Thai: ไพร่ (th) (prâi), ข้าไพร่
- Tibetan: མངའ་འབངས (mnga' 'bangs), མངའ་ཞབས (mnga' zhabs), དུད་ཆང (dud chang), བྲན (bran), བྲན་གཡོག (bran g.yog), འབངས་འཁོར ('bangs 'khor), མི་སེར (mi ser)
- Ukrainian: кріпосни́й m (kriposnýj), кріпосна́ f (kriposná), кріпа́к (uk) m (kripák)
- Vietnamese: nông nô (vi) (農奴)
- Welsh: taeog
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See also
Anagrams
Catalan
Etymology
Inherited from Latin servus.
Pronunciation
Noun
serf m (plural serfs, feminine serva)
- serf
Further reading
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch serf, from Old French serf, from Latin servus.
Noun
serf m (plural serven, diminutive serfje n)
- a serf (semifree peasant obliged to remain on the lord's land and to perform extensive chores for him)
- Synonyms: halfvrije, horige, laat, lijfeigene
French
Etymology
Inherited from Middle French serf, from Old French serf, from Latin servus (“slave, serf, servant”), from Proto-Indo-European *ser-wo- (“guardian”), or perhaps of Etruscan origin.
Pronunciation
Noun
serf m (plural serfs, feminine serve)
- a serf (semifree peasant obliged to remain on the lord's land and to perform extensive chores for him)
Adjective
serf (feminine serve, masculine plural serfs, feminine plural serves)
- being or like a serf, semifree
Further reading
Anagrams
Mauritian Creole
Etymology
From French cerf.
Noun
serf
- deer
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French serf.
Noun
serf m (plural serfs)
- serf (semifree peasant)
Descendants
Northern Kurdish
Etymology
From Arabic صرف (ṣarf, “expense”).
Pronunciation
Noun
serf f
- expense, cost
Old French
Etymology 1
From Latin servus.
Noun
serf oblique singular, m (oblique plural sers, nominative singular sers, nominative plural serf)
- serf (semifree peasant)
Descendants
Etymology 2
See servir
Verb
serf
- first-person singular present indicative of servir
Seychellois Creole
Etymology
From French cerf.
Noun
serf
- deer
References
- Danielle D’Offay et Guy Lionnet, Diksyonner Kreol - Franse / Dictionnaire Créole Seychellois - Français