falfaron 27
Everyone who collaborates with the dictionary know that in this community they put anything as a consultation, but sometimes a donkey like 'falfaron' can be the fault of . . . an OCR. While we are, it is explained here : 128302; the query is for "false", inflection of the verb falser, but extracted from a very old text where it was like "402;to 383;aron". When digitized the soft correctly interpreted the '402;' ( "ephe with ligature") and converted it to 'f'; but he did the same with '383;' ("that long one" ), which today is simply an 's'. 128530;