الواصلة
ma·raudالتركية النطق
mırôdعلم أصول الكلمات
[ m&-'rod ] (verb.) 1711. 1690, from French marauder, derivative of maraud (“rogue, vagabond”), from Middle French maraud (“rascal”), from Old French marault (“beggar, vagabond”), from marir, marrir (“to trouble, stray, lose ones way, be lost”), of Germanic origin, from Frankish *marrjan (“to neglect, hinder”), from Proto-Germanic *marzjánan (“to neglect, hinder, spoil”), from Proto-Indo-European *mers- (“to trouble, confuse, ignore, forget”), + Old French suffix -ault, -aud. Cognate with Old High German marrjan, marren (“to obstruct, hinder”), Old Saxon merrian (“to hinder, waste”), Gothic