traire

verb

Syllable Decomposition

traire

from a popular Latin *tragere, rebuilt from the classical Latin trahere 'to pull'. In Old French, the verb traire meant 'to pull', in the broadest sense of the term. Competing with the verb tirer, of regular conjugation, traire has only been preserved in the specialized sense of 'to pull on the udder to extract the milk'. It displaced the Old French moudre, derived from the Latin mulgeo.

Definition

élevage

Conjugation

→ Conjugation of "traire"

Translations

  • germangerman:melken
  • englishenglish:milk
  • danishdanish:malke
  • spanishspanish:ordeñar
  • finnishfinnish:lypsää
  • greekgreek:αρμέγω
  • hebrewhebrew:לחלוב
  • italianitalian:mungere
  • dutchdutch:melken
  • polishpolish:doić
  • portugueseportuguese:ordenhar
  • russianrussian:доить
  • swedishswedish:mjölka

See also

tract (cn.) retirage (cn.) attractionnaire (adj.) attracteur (adj.) attraire (v.) traites (cn.) traites (adj.) trayeur (cn.) tracter (v.) tractif (adj.) retirer (v.) traitement (cn.) tir (cn.) trait (cn.) trait (adj.) trait (v.) retiré (adj.) tireuse (cn.) tiré (adj.) retraitement (cn.)