- ("bird") Friedrich,
forename composed of Old High
German fridu ("peace") and
rîhhi ("rich, realm") Keller,
occupation (winemaker) Günther,
forename Frank,...
- eighth-century Paternoster:
Fater unser, thu bist in
himile uuihi namu
dinan qhueme rihhi diin
uuerde uuillo diin, so in himile, sosa in erdu
prooth unseer emezzihic...
- as
liege lords of the King of Hólmgarðr. Old
Norse ríki, Old High
German rīhhi, and Old
English rīce stem from the Proto-Germanic *rīkja-
meaning "kingdom...
-
Friedrich or Friederich, from the Old High
German fridu meaning "peace" and
rîhhi meaning "ruler" or "power". It is the
common form of
Frederick in Norway...
- nos a malo.
Fater unseer, thu pist in himile,
uuihi namun dinan,
qhueme rihhi diin,
uuerde uuillo diin, so in
himile sosa in erdu.
prooth unseer emezzihic...
-
German ōstan (eastern), but its
exact derivation is unclear. Old High
German rihhi had the
meaning of "realm, domain". The
Marchia orientalis, also called...
- form of Dietrich,
composed of the same
prefix but the
unrelated suffix rihhi "rich".
People called Diether include:
Diether von
Isenburg (d. 1482) Diether...
- high
German "heima" = "the home, the home country" and old high
German "
rihhi" = "powerful, rich". The
female form is Heike.
Notable people called Heiko...
-
peace Y Remisto,
Remismund run rune,
secret Y Gudrun,
Walaruna rīki-; OHG
rihhi, AS rīc
ruler Y Y Rigobert, Alaric, Ælfric, Beorthric, Brunric, Theodoric/Dietrich...
- free dictionary. The
German noun
Reich is
derived from Old High German:
rīhhi,
which together with its
cognates in Old English: rīce, Old Norse: ríki...