noble
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English, from Old French noble, from Latin nōbilis (“knowable, known, well-known, famous, celebrated, high-born, of noble birth, excellent”), from nōscere, gnōscere (“to know”).
False cognate of Arabic نبيل (nabīl). Displaced native Middle English athel, from Old English æþele.
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noble (plural nobles)
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noble (comparative nobler or more noble, superlative noblest or most noble)
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noble m or f (masculine and feminine plural nobles)
noble m or f by sense (plural nobles)
Inherited from Middle French, from Old French noble, borrowed from Latin nōbilis according to the TLFi dictionary.
noble (plural nobles)
noble m or f by sense (plural nobles)
noble
From Old French noble, from Latin nōbilis.
noble
From Old French, from Latin nōbilis.
noble m or f (plural nobles)
noble m (oblique and nominative feminine singular noble)
noble m or f or n (masculine plural nobli, feminine and neuter plural noble)
noble m or f (masculine and feminine plural nobles)
noble
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