freend
Middle English
Scots
Etymology
From Middle English frend, freend, from Old English frēond, from Proto-Germanic *frijōndz.
Noun
freend (plural freends)
- friend
- 1884, various, Wilson's Tales of the Borders and of Scotland, XXII:
- Weel, ye see, as I was telling ye, things passed on in this way till I was thirty, when a respectable flesher in Edinburgh that I did a good deal o' business wi', and that had just got married, says to me in the Grassmarket ae day: 'Davy,' says he, 'ye're no gaun out o' the toun the night--will ye come and tak' tea and supper wi' the wife and me, and a freend or twa?' "'
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
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