ford

See also: -ford, Ford, ford., förd, forð, and forð-

English

Alternative forms

  • foorth (obsolete, [14th century])

Etymology

  • Inherited from Middle English fōrd, from Old English ford, from Proto-West Germanic *furdu, from Proto-Germanic *furduz, from Proto-Indo-European *pértus (crossing).

    Doublet of firth, fjord, and fjard, all via Old Norse; and port, distantly via Latin. Cognate with Low German Föörd, Dutch voord, German Furt, Norwegian and Danish fjord. See also forth and Persian پل (pol, bridge).

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    ford (plural fords)

    1. A location where a stream is shallow and the bottom has good footing, making it possible to cross from one side to the other with no bridge, by walking, riding, or driving through the water; a crossing.
      Synonym: water-splash
    2. A stream; a current.

    Derived terms

    Translations

    Verb

    ford (third-person singular simple present fords, present participle fording, simple past and past participle forded)

    1. To cross a stream by walking through it.
      • 1902, John Buchan, The Outgoing of the Tide:
        He named that place, for it was near her dwelling, and on the road between Balerynie and Heriotside, which fords the Sker Burn.
      • 1903, Mary Hunter Austin, The Land of Little Rain[1], Houghton Mifflin, pages 31–2:
        Since the time of Seyavi the deer have shifted their feeding ground across the valley at the beginning of deep snows, by way of the Black Rock, fording the river at Charley's Butte, and making straight for the mouth of the cañon that is the easiest going to the winter pastures on Waban.
      • 1982, Nadine Gordimer, “A Hunting Accident”, in A Soldier's Embrace, Penguin, page 59:
        Ratau drove with reckless authority through the quiet morning fires of his father's and forefathers' town and forded a river of goats on the road leading out of it.
      • 2016, Bruce McClure and Deborah Byrd, "EarthSky's meteor shower guide for 2016" in earthsky.org, [2]
        Some who witnessed the 1966 Leonid meteor storm said they felt as if they needed to grip the ground, so strong was the impression of Earth plowing along through space, fording the meteoroid stream.
    2. (by extension) This term needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.
      • 2004, Intelligent Systems, translated by Nintendo of America, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, Nintendo, GameCube, level/area: Rogueport:
        I spent several days fording through dense jungle.
      • 2013 December 2, Uzor Maxim Uzoatu, “The Antiman”, in Munyori Literary Journal[3]:
        I use my ample shoulders to ford through the crowd, ignoring a curse here, smothering boos here and there, and generally standing my ground in the face of the disapprovals of those I shove.

    Derived terms

    Translations

    Anagrams

    Old Cornish

    Etymology

    from Old English ford, from Proto-West Germanic *furdu, from Proto-Germanic *furduz

    Noun

    ford

    1. path, way

    Old English

    Etymology

  • Inherited from Proto-West Germanic *furdu, from Proto-Germanic *furduz (ford). Cognate with Old Frisian ford, Old Saxon ford, and Old Dutch ford, Old High German furt.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ford/, [forˠd]

    Noun

    ford m

    1. ford

    Declension

    Strong u-stem:

    singular plural
    nominative ford forda
    accusative ford forda
    genitive forda forda
    dative forda fordum

    Strong a-stem:

    Derived terms

    Descendants

    • Middle English: ford, furd, foord
    • Proto-Brythonic: *forð (road) (see there for further descendants)

    Welsh

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /vɔrd/

    Noun

    ford

    1. soft mutation of bord

    Mutation

    Mutated forms of bord
    radical soft nasal aspirate
    bord ford mord unchanged

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.