galerous
Appearance
Old French
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Seems to be borrowed from an unattested, inverted form of Old Norse hrosshvalr (literally “horse whale”), whence Danish hvalros, German Walross and English walrus.
Noun
[edit]galerous oblique singular, m (oblique plural galerous, nominative singular galerous, nominative plural galerous)
- walrus
- late 12th century, anonymous author, “La Folie de Tristan de Berne”, in Le Roman de Tristan, Champion Classiques edition, →ISBN, page 310, lines 157–8:
- Qui t'engendra? — Uns galerous
— De que t'ot il? — D'une balaine- — Who is your father? — A walrus
— Who did he have you with? — A whale (Tristan is deliberately speaking nonsense in this passage in order to pass for a harmless madman)
- — Who is your father? — A walrus
Usage notes
[edit]- The usage above seems to be the only known usage of the term.