firangi

noun
/fiɹʌŋɡiː/

Etymology

Borrowed from Hindustani फ़िरंगी (firaṅgī) / فرنگی (firangī), from Classical Persian فرنگی (farangī), from Old French franc. Doublet of franc.

  1. derived from franc
  2. derived from فرنگی

Definitions

  1. A foreigner, especially a British or a white person.

    • Prem, who knew him slightly from Dehra Dun (where Dhillon had been his junior), remembers Dhillon cheerfully telling everyone that the firangi were glad to have Indians patrolling their wire. This Prem doubted.
    • Then Kashibayi cleared her throat and told him, "Maharaj, our Babasaheb Sarkar was a very patriotic king who fought against the firangi fellows. He was betrayed by his own people who were shamelessly treacherous."
    • The neighbouring men had all come to see the firangi, the foreign woman, [...]
  2. Alternative spelling of firangi.

    • ‘There is no higher feature this side of the river than your house. You could be the first to notice the Firangi army when it nears Kalinadi.’
    • We watched the Firangi as they struggled through the pass, their hands frozen and fingers unable to load their heavy muskets.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for firangi. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA