See also: Dondo

Galician

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Attested since the 14th century. From Latin domitus (tamed). Cognate with Spanish duendo and Asturian dondu.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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dondo (feminine donda, masculine plural dondos, feminine plural dondas)

  1. (archaic) tamed, meek
    • c1350, Kelvin M. Parker (ed.), Historia Troyana. Santiago: Instituto "Padre Sarmiento":
      et fezestes los vij̃r dondos' ao arrado aos que nũqua souberã de nehũa prijon
      and you made them come, as meek ones, to the plough, they who never knew a prison
  2. soft; gentle
  3. flexible, pliant

Derived terms

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References

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Old Leonese

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Etymology

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Inherited from Latin domitus.

Pronunciation

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Adjective

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dondo

  1. soft (the terrain)
    • 1285, Carta de Venta:
      todos sos derechos e petenençias, corrales, lavorias, techos, fontes, montes, felgueras, molneras, roças, devisas, lavrado e por lavrar, dondo e bravo, dientro e fora
      with all of their rights and competences, barnyards, tillages, roofs, fountains, forests, ferns, mills, shrubs, camps, tilled and to be tilled, soft and hard, inside and out

Descendants

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  • Asturian: dondu
  • Leonese: dondiu
  • Mirandese: dóndio