Palfrey
Origin
Middle English, from Anglo-Norman palefrei ("steed"), from Old French palefroi, from Late Latin paraverÄ“dus ("post horse, spare horse"), from Ancient Greek παÏά, from πάÏιππος (parippos, "spare horse") + Latin verÄ“dus ("post horse"), from Gaulish *werÄ“dos ("horse") (compare Welsh gorwydd ("horse")), from Proto-Celtic *uforÄ“dos ("horse").
Full definition of palfrey
Noun
palfrey
(plural palfreys)- (historical) A small horse with a smooth, ambling gait, popular in the Middle Ages with nobles and women.
- 1793, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, , lines 84-85 (for syntax)They choked my cries with force and fright,And tied me on a palfrey white.----