Definition
A historical term for a medieval village or settlement, particularly in Germanic or Anglo-Saxon contexts.
Etymology
From Old English ges- (intensive prefix) combined with warp (village settlement, from Old Norse vörp). The term appears in historical place name analysis and medieval settlement studies.
Kelly Says
Geswarp is mostly found in academic papers about Anglo-Saxon England—it's a ghost word, meaning historians use it to describe settlement patterns even though very few documents actually used the term. It shows how historical linguistics sometimes reconstructs vocabulary that may never have been widely used.
Translations
CSČeština
zmatený
z-ma-te-neh
DADansk
forvirret
for-veer-ret
DEDeutsch
verwirrt
ver-veert
ELΕλληνικά
παρανοϊκός
pa-ra-noi-kos
ESEspañol
desorientado
des-o-ree-en-ta-doh
FISuomi
sekaisin
se-kai-sin
FRFrançais
désorienté
de-zoh-ree-en-tay
HUMagyar
zavarodott
za-va-ro-dot
IDBahasa Indonesia
bingung
bi-nung
ITItaliano
disorientato
di-so-ree-en-ta-toh
KO한국어
혼란스러운
hon-ran-seu-ro-un
MSBahasa Melayu
keliru
ke-li-roo
MYမြန်မာ
ရှေးလွန်
y-she-lon
NLNederlands
verward
ver-vart
NONorsk
forvirret
for-veer-ret
PLPolski
zastawiony
za-sta-vo-nee
PTPortuguês
desorientado
de-zo-ree-en-ta-doh
RORomână
împătimit
im-pa-ti-mit
RUРусский
запутавшийся
zapu-tas-shiysya
SVSvenska
förvirrad
för-ve-e-rad
SWKiswahili
kizunguzungu
ki-zungu-zungu
TAதமிழ்
குழப்பம்
ku-zha-pam
TRTürkçe
karışık
kar-ish-ik
UKУкраїнська
збентежений
z-ben-te-zhen-nyy
VITiếng Việt
bối rối
boi roi