cafre

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French

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Pronunciation

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  • Audio:(file)

Noun

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cafre m (plural cafres)

  1. (obsolete, offensive) Kaffir

Further reading

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Italian

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈka.fre/
  • Rhymes: -afre
  • Hyphenation: cà‧fre

Adjective

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cafre

  1. feminine plural of cafro

Anagrams

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Macanese

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Presumably from Portuguese cafre, from Arabic كَافِر (kāfir, infidel).

Noun

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cafre (rare)

  1. black African
  2. any dark-skinned person

Usage notes

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  • Very rarely used in modern Macanese. African soldiers who did military service in Macau up until the 1960s were referred to by the generic name landins.[1]

Adjective

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cafre

  1. black
    mui cafreblack plum

References

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  1. ^ Batalha, Graciete Nogueira (1988) “cafre”, in Glossário do dialecto macaense: notas linguísticas, etnográficas e folclóricas [Glossary of the Macanese dialect: linguistic, ethnographic and folkloric notes], Macau: Instituto Cultural de Macau, page 338

Further reading

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Portuguese

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Etymology

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From Arabic كَافِر (kāfir, infidel). Attested since 1516 (Dicionário Houaiss da Língua Portuguesa).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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cafre m (plural cafres)

  1. Kaffir

Descendants

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  • Macanese: cafre, cáfre

Spanish

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Etymology

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From Portuguese cafre, from Arabic كَافِر (kāfir, infidel).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈkafɾe/ [ˈka.fɾe]
  • Rhymes: -afɾe
  • Syllabification: ca‧fre

Noun

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cafre m or f by sense (plural cafres)

  1. (historical) inhabitant of British Kaffraria, a former British colony in South Africa
  2. (Philippines, folklore) ogre or giant believed to smoke cigars and live in old trees, especially balete (banyan) trees

Adjective

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cafre m or f (masculine and feminine plural cafres)

  1. (historical, relational) of British Kaffraria
  2. (colloquial) cruel and barbaric
  3. (colloquial) uncouth, boorish

Further reading

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