"
my etymology.com

Etymology of the French word poulet

the Old French word poulet
derived from the Old French word poule
derived from the Latin word pulla
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)
derived from the Latin word pullulare (sprout, send forth new growth; spring forth)
derived from the Latin word pullulus
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)
derived from the Latin word pullulare (sprout, send forth new growth; spring forth)
derived from the Latin word pullulus
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)
derived from the Latin word pullulare (sprout, send forth new growth; spring forth)
derived from the Latin word pullulus
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)
derived from the Latin word pullulare (sprout, send forth new growth; spring forth)
derived from the Latin word pullulus
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)
derived from the Latin word pullulare (sprout, send forth new growth; spring forth)
derived from the Latin word pullulus
derived from the Latin word pullus (blackish, dark colored, of undyed wool as worn in morning; chicken, young hen)

Derivations in French

pouletier, frise-poulet, poulaga

Derivations in other languages

English pullet, English poult

Cognates

Provençal polet

Usage

Word found in Old French



© 2008 myetymology.com - l'étymologie de tous les mots
Dapyx Software: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic