estranno
Old Spanish
Etymology
From Latin extrāneus (“strange, foreign”), from extrā (“outside”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
estranno m (feminine estranna, masculine plural estrannos, feminine plural extrannas)
- strange, peculiar
- c. 1250, Alfonso X, Lapidario, f. 9r.
- Et aun a otra uertud muy eſtranna. que ſi la molieré ¬ la amaſſaren có uino ¬ fizieré della como bellota. ¬ la puſieren en la natura dela mugier, uieda que no enprenne.
- And it has yet another very strange virtue; that if it were to be ground and mixed with wine and shaped like an acorn, and put inside the vulva of the woman, it would prevent her from not becoming pregnant.
- Et aun a otra uertud muy eſtranna. que ſi la molieré ¬ la amaſſaren có uino ¬ fizieré della como bellota. ¬ la puſieren en la natura dela mugier, uieda que no enprenne.
- c. 1250, Alfonso X, Lapidario, f. 9r.
Descendants
- Spanish: extraño