/ˈbanda/, [ˈban̪.d̪ɐ]
Orixe14th century. From Old French bande, bende, from Frankish *bindā, bindu, from Proto-Germanic *bindō (“band”).
- feminineband, strip
- femininebank
- femininebend
“c. 1350, Kelvin M. Parker (ed.), Historia Troyana. Santiago: Instituto Padre Sarmiento, page 129” — Pytagoras was a very good knight and very valiant, and he was wearing a shield of silver and red, with traversal bands
- feminineorganized group of people
- feminineband (musical group)
- feminineside
“outra leyra jaz a caron de outra de Lourenço d'Alen, e da outra banda parte con outra de Gonçalo Carreira” — the other field is by another of Lourenzo d'Alén, and on the other side it departs from another belonging to Gonzalo Carreira
- femininebank; flank
- feminine, figurativelyplace; land
Formasbandas(plural)