Anglais modifier

Étymologie modifier

Du moyen anglais adowne, du vieil anglais adūn, du ofdūne, dérivé de dūne.

Adverbe modifier

Invariable
adown
\Prononciation ?\

adown \əˈdaʊn\ invariable

  1. (Archaïsme) Variante de down, downward.
    • Many a family circle wept as they looked upon the familiar places, which would know their lost ones no more; but ah, chide me not, kind reader, in thus leading you adown to the coldness of death, in setting before you that which causes your tender heart to shudder. — (Ferna Vale, Natalie; or, A Gem Among the Sea-Weeds, 1859)

Préposition modifier

Invariable
adown
\Prononciation ?\

adown \əˈdaʊn\ invariable

  1. (Archaïsme) Variante de down.
    • I fell from one dream into another; found myself wandering through impossible places; […] peering out into the darkness, to catch a sight of a vague figure standing somewhere in the shadow, and looking, with the sun streaming into my eyes and blinding me, adown long white roads filled with a multitude of people […] — (J. H. Riddell, The Uninhabited House)