פֿוּאירי

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Judeo-Italian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Inherited from Vulgar Latin *fugīre, 4th-declension reshaping of Classical Latin fugere (whence פֿוּיֵירֵי (fujere)), from Proto-Italic *fugiō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰugyéti, yé-present derivation of *bʰewg- (to flee).

Verb[edit]

פֿוּאִירֵי (fuire) (third-person singular imperfective פֿוּאִיוַה (fuiva))

  1. (intransitive, or transitive with אה (+ destination)) to flee (to), to escape (to)
    • 16th century, chapter 4, in לוּ לִיבֵירוֹ דֵי יוֹנַה [The Book of Jonah], line 2; published in Luisa Cuomo, transl., Una traduzione giudeo-romanesca del Libro di Giona [A Judeo-Roman translation of the Book of Jonah], Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1988, →ISBN, →ISSN, page 9:
      אֵי אוּרַאווֹ אַה דוּמֵידֵית אֵי דִידֵי מוֹ דוּמֵידֵית ײַה קוּוֵיסְטוֹ פַארַאוֵילַה מֵיאַה פִֿינַה אֵיסֵירֵי אִייוֹ סוּפֵירַה טֵירַה מֵיאַה פֵיר צוֹ אַדִיצִיפַאִיי אַה פֿוּאִירֵי אַה תַרשִיש
      E uravo a Dumedet e disse mo Dumedet jjà quvesto paravela mea fina essere ijo supera terra mea per ciò addecepaij a fuire a Ṭaršiš
      And he prayed to the Lord, and said: "Please, o Lord, indeed this [was] my word, as long as I was in my land. Therefore I hastened to flee to Tarshish"
      (Transliteration by Luisa Cuomo)