Definition
Plural of ceorl; multiple freemen of the lowest rank in Anglo-Saxon England.
Etymology
Simple plural form of ceorl, following Old English nominal pluralization. The term appears frequently in historical documents describing the composition of Anglo-Saxon society.
Kelly Says
Historical records show that ceorls made up the bulk of Anglo-Saxon society—they were farmers, craftspeople, and merchants who kept the economy running while nobles got all the historical credit, much like today!
Translations
AMአማርኛ
አገር ሰራተኞች
a-ger se-ra-te-nyoch
ARالعربية
فلاحون
falahoon
CACatalà
pagesos
pa-heh-sos
CSČeština
dělníci
deh-l-nee-chee
ELΕλληνικά
εργάτες
er-ga-tes
ESEspañol
campesinos
kam-peh-see-nohs
FAفارسی
کشاورز
kesh-a-varz
FISuomi
maatalousyrittäjät
maa-ta-a-loo-yu-ritt-a-jät
FRFrançais
paysans
pɛ.sɑ̃
HAHA
makiyaya
ma-ki-ya-ya
HEעברית
חקלאים
ḥa-k-la-yim
HUMagyar
paraszt
pa-ra-szt
IDBahasa Indonesia
petani
pe-ta-nee
ITItaliano
contadini
kon-ta-dee-nee
MRMR
शेतकरी
she-ta-ka-ree
MSBahasa Melayu
peasant
pe-sant
MYမြန်မာ
ကျွန်ုပ်
kyun-o-p
NLNederlands
boeren
boːrən
PTPortuguês
camponeses
kam-po-neh-seehs
RORomână
țărani
tsa-ra-nee
RUРусский
крестьяне
kret-st-ya-nye
SWKiswahili
wakulima
wa-koo-lee-ma
TAதமிழ்
வியாபாரிகள்
vi-ya-pa-ri-gar
TEతెలుగు
కార్మికులు
ka-ar-mi-ku-lu
TLTL
magsasaka
mag-sa-sa-ka
TRTürkçe
köylüler
coy-loo-ler
UKУкраїнська
селяни
se-ly-a-nee
VITiếng Việt
nông dân
nong daan