loutre

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French

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Etymology

From Old French lutre, from Latin lutra, from Proto-Italic *utrā, from Proto-Indo-European *udréh₂, the feminine form of *udrós, from the root *wed-. In Old French, there were variants leurre (which is the normal phonetic result) and loirre (from a Vulgar Latin form *lutria, influenced by Ancient Greek ἐνυδρίς (enudrís); cf. Occitan luria, Catalan llúdria, Spanish lutria, nutria). The standard modern form loutre probably maintained the -t- due to influence from Frankish and Germanic (compare Dutch and English otter, German Otter).

Pronunciation

Noun

loutre f (plural loutres)

  1. otter

Descendants

  • Romanian: lutră

Further reading

Anagrams