Feal
Origin 1
From Middle English fele, fæle ("proper, of the right sort"), from Old English fǣle ("faithful, trusty, good; dear, beloved"), from Proto-Germanic *failijaz ("true, friendly, familiar, good"), from Proto-Indo-European *pey- ("to adore"). Cognate with Scots feel, feelie ("cosy, neat, clean, comfortable"), West Frisian feilich ("safe"), Dutch veil ("for-sale"), Dutch veilig ("safe"), German feil ("for-sale"), Latin pīus ("good, dutiful, faithful, devout, pious").
Full definition of feal
Adjective
feal
- (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) (of things) Cosy; clean; neat.
- 1847, Henry Scott Riddell, Poems, songs and miscellaneous pieces:But if it stands in humble hame The bed, — I'll say this far in't, — Is clean and feel as ony lair King ever lay on — and that is mair Than mony ane could warrant.
- (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) (of persons) Comfortable; cosy; safe.
- 1887, Allan Cunningham, Henry Morley, Traditional tales of the English and Scottish peasantry:... when I care na to accompany ye to the kirkyard hole mysel, and take my word for't, ye'Il lie saftest and fealest on the Buittle side of the kirk; ...
- (UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Smooth; soft; downy; velvety.
Origin 2
From Middle English felen, from Old Norse fela ("to hide"), from Proto-Germanic *felhaną ("to conceal, hide, bury, trust, intrude"), from Proto-Indo-European *pele(w)-, *plē(w)- ("to hide"). Cognate with Old High German felahan ("to pass, trust, sow"), Old English fēolan ("to cleave, enter, penetrate").
Verb
- (transitive, dialectal) To hide.
Origin 3
(Not found in Middle English), from Old French feal, collateral form of feeil, from Latin fidelis.