[ˈfɛrdɛ]
OriginFrom the fered variant of fürdik (“to bathe”, the word family originally expressing “to turn, revolve, spin”) + -e (obsolete present-participle suffix). Its current meaning goes back to the sense “to turn round, diverge, deviate from straight”, compare fordul.
- slanting, inclined, oblique
- leaning (to one side), tilted, crooked
- sideways (glance)
- perverted (view), awkward (behavior)
Formsferdébb(comparative) · legferdébb(superlative) · ferde(nominative, singular) · ferdék(nominative, plural) · ferdét(accusative, singular) · ferdéket(accusative, plural) · ferdének(dative, singular) · ferdéknek(dative, plural) · ferdével(instrumental, singular) · ferdékkel(instrumental, plural) · ferdéért(causal-final, singular) · ferdékért(causal-final, plural) · ferdévé(singular, translative) · ferdékké(plural, translative) · ferdéig(singular, terminative) · ferdékig(plural, terminative) · ferdeként(essive-formal, singular) · ferdékként(essive-formal, plural) · -(essive-modal, singular) · -(essive-modal, plural)