From: Marc Verhaegen
Message: 320
Date: 1999-11-22
.... >Of course colour terms evolve and Homer's "metallic" could be "blue" several generations later. The Slavic languages have several different terms for "blue", and Old English had no equivalent of Modern English BLUE (which is a loanword from French).Is it? French "bleu" is a loanword from Franconian (Dutch "blauw"), as are several other color names (French<Dutch): bleu<blauw, blond<blond, blanc<blank, brun<bruin, gris<grijs. Germanic "bl-" seems to have meant something like "without colour": black, blond, blind, blue... Marc
It is, despite the fact that the word is ultimately Germanic, as you correctly point out. So are many other French words that were borrowed into English in the Middle Ages (e.g. guard, while ward continues OE weard 'guardian'). PiotrThen French bleu replaced OE blâw? Marc