Carlings

//ˈkɑːlɪŋz// name, noun

name, noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    plural of carling form-of, plural
Proper Noun
  1. 1
    plural of Carling (“a descendant of Charles Martel; a Carolingian”) form-of, plural

    "Lothar died soon after, in 986; and though his son Louis V. was crowned, he only lived a year, and when he died in 987, the great counts and dukes met in consultation with the chief of the clergy, and agreed that, as the Counts of Paris were the real heads of the State, and nobody cared for the Carlings, it would be better to do like the Germans, and pass over the worn-out Carlings, who spoke old Frank, while the Paris Counts spoke the altered Latin, which came to be called French."

Example

More examples

"Lothar died soon after, in 986; and though his son Louis V. was crowned, he only lived a year, and when he died in 987, the great counts and dukes met in consultation with the chief of the clergy, and agreed that, as the Counts of Paris were the real heads of the State, and nobody cared for the Carlings, it would be better to do like the Germans, and pass over the worn-out Carlings, who spoke old Frank, while the Paris Counts spoke the altered Latin, which came to be called French."

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.