elope

elope
elope 1590s, "to run off," probably a reborrowing from M.Du. (ont)lopen "run away." Sense of "run from parents to marry secretly" is 19c. Anglo-Fr. aloper "run away from a husband with one's lover" is attested from mid-14c., but there is a gap of many years. The Anglo-French word represents O.Fr es- + M.E. lepen "run, leap" (see LEAP (Cf. leap) (v.)). The oldest Germanic word for "wedding" is represented by O.E. brydlop (Cf. O.H.G. bruthlauft, O.N. bruðhlaup), lit. "bridal run," the conducting of the woman to her new home. Related: Eloped; eloping.

Etymology dictionary. 2014.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР
Synonyms:
(as a woman with a paramour), ,


Look at other dictionaries:

  • elope — elope; elope·ment; …   English syllables

  • Elope — E*lope , v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Eloped}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Eloping}.] [D. ontloopen to run away; pref. ont (akin to G. ent , AS. and , cf. E. answer) + loopen to run; akin to E. leap. See {Leap}, v. t.] To run away, or escape privately, from the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • elope — [v] run away to be married abscond, bolt, decamp, disappear, escape, flee, fly, go secretly, go to Gretna Green*, leave, run off, skip*, slip away, slip out, steal away; concept 297 …   New thesaurus

  • elope — ► VERB ▪ run away secretly in order to get married. DERIVATIVES elopement noun. ORIGIN Old French aloper …   English terms dictionary

  • elope — [ē lōp′, ilōp′] vi. eloped, eloping [Anglo Fr aloper, prob. < ME * aleapen, to leap up, run away < OE ahleapan (infl. ? by ON hlaupa, to run > LOPE) < a , away + hleapan, to run, LEAP] 1. to run away secretly, esp. in order to get… …   English World dictionary

  • elope — UK [ɪˈləʊp] / US [ɪˈloʊp] verb [intransitive] Word forms elope : present tense I/you/we/they elope he/she/it elopes present participle eloping past tense eloped past participle eloped if two people elope, they go away secretly to get married… …   English dictionary

  • elope — v. (D; intr.) to elope with (she eloped with her childhood sweetheart) * * * [ɪ ləʊp] (D; intr.) to elope with (she eloped with her childhood sweetheart) …   Combinatory dictionary

  • elope — e|lope [ ı loup ] verb intransitive if two people elope, they go away secretly to get married ╾ e|lope|ment noun count or uncount …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • elope — [17] Etymologically, elope signifies ‘leap away’. It was originally an Anglo Norman legal term applied to a married woman running off with a lover, and only in the past couple of hundred years has it come to be applied to a couple leaving home to …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • elope — [[t]ɪlo͟ʊp[/t]] elopes, eloping, eloped V RECIP When two people elope they go away secretly together to get married. [pl n V] My girlfriend Lynn and I eloped... [V with n] In 1912 he eloped with Frieda von Richthofen …   English dictionary

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