Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WiktionaryThe Free Dictionary
Search

er

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "er"
Languages (55)
English
Afrikaans • Alemannic German • Bavarian • Breton • Cimbrian • Cornish • Crimean Tatar • Czech • Danish • Dutch • Faroese • Gagauz • German • Hunsrik • Iberian • Icelandic • Indonesian • Italian • Jamtish • Japanese • Kembra • Latin • Latvian • Low German • Lower Sorbian • Malay • Mambae • Mandarin • Manx • Middle Dutch • Middle English • Middle High German • Mòcheno • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Old Dutch • Old Frisian • Old High German • Old Norse • Old Prussian • Old Saxon • Old Tupi • Palauan • Pennsylvania German • Polabian • Polish • Salar • Saterland Frisian • Scots • Swedish • Turkish • Uzbek • Welsh • West Frisian
Page categories

English

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

Mimetic (sound of hesitation)

Interjection

[edit]

er

  1. (informal)Said whenhesitating in speech.
    Synonyms:ah,eh,erm,uh,um
    • 1970,Richard Carpenter,Catweazle, Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, page11:
      Er...Feathered Omen, hoot not,” he continued uneasily, “Son of Tanit, hoot not!”
    • 2007 August 24, William Grimes, “Uh, Lead My Rips: No More Bloopers”, inThe New York Times[1], archived fromthe original on4 January 2013:
      As the years go by, speech reverts to childhood levels of disfluency, with more pauses, more errors, more repeated words, but even the peak years are not great: up to 8 percent of the average person’s word output consists of meaningless fillers and placeholders like um, uh ander.
    • 2012, Linda Miller,Desire and Destiny:
      If he—er—disappears—well, it seems to me that we'd both benefit.
    • 2019 December 10,Yacht Club Games, "Story" (Mona), inShovel Knight Showdown (version 4.1),Nintendo Switch:
      Liquid Samurai: 'FORMLESS AND INFINITE ARE WE, THE LIQUID SAMURAI. I SERVE MY QUEEN, AS WE HAVE FOR COUNTLESS--' /Mona: 'HEY, I DON'T MEAN TO INTERRUPT, BUT YOU SEEM LIKE YOU'RE MADE OF POWERFUL STUFF. CAN I,ER, STUDY YOU?'
Translations
[edit]
hesitating in speech

Verb

[edit]

er (third-person singular simple presenters,present participleerring,simple past and past participleerred)

  1. (informal, transitive, intransitive) Toutter the worder whenhesitating inspeech.
    Synonyms:ah,eh,um;hem and haw
    um ander
    He ummed anderred his way through the presentation.

Noun

[edit]

er (pluralers)

  1. An occurrence of the interjection "er".
    • 2007 August 24, William Grimes, “Uh, Lead My Rips: No More Bloopers”, inThe New York Times[2], archived fromthe original on4 January 2013:
      Although Shakespeare refers to “hums and ha’s,” sifting through etiquette manuals and public-speaking guides turns up scant evidence of a prohibition against ums,ers and uhs, which are profuse in the first recording of Thomas Edison’s voice, in 1888. Mr. Erard, rather ingeniously, traces the prohibition on um and other speech flaws to the advent of radio in the early 1920s.

Etymology 2

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er (pluralers)

  1. The name of theCyrillic script letterР /р.

Anagrams

[edit]

Afrikaans

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er (pluralerreorers,diminutiveerretjie)

  1. The name of theLatin script letterR/r.

Alemannic German

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromMiddle High Germanër, fromOld High Germanër, fromProto-Germanic*iz. Cognate withGermaner.

Pronoun

[edit]

er m

  1. (personal)he;it

Declension

[edit]
Alemannic German personal pronouns
nominativeaccusativedativepossessivem
singular1st personich,imich,mimir,mier,mermin,miin
2nd
person
familiardudich,didir,dier,derdin,diin
politeSiIne,Ene,-neIre
3rd
person
merin,enimsin,siin
fsiire
nes,'s,-simsin,siin
plural1st personmir,merüs,öis,ois,eusüse,öise,oise,euse
2nd personir,ieröi,euöie,eure
3rd personsiine,ene,-neire

Bavarian

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • ea(phonetic spelling)
  • a(unstressed form)

Etymology

[edit]

FromMiddle High Germanër, fromOld High Germanër(he). Cognate withGermaner.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. he

See also

[edit]
Bavarian personal pronouns
nominativeaccusativedative
stressedunstressedstressedunstressedstressedunstressed
1st person singularimimia (mir)ma
2nd person singularinformaldudidia (dir)da
formalSieEahnaEahna
3rd person singularmeraeahm'neahm'n
nes,des'sdes's
fse,de'sse'sihr
1st person pluralmia (mir)maunsuns
2nd person plural,ihrenk,eichenk,eich
3rd person pluralse'seahnaeahna

Breton

[edit]

Contraction

[edit]

er

  1. contraction ofe +‎ur, literallyin a(n)
  2. contraction ofe +‎ar, literallyin the

Cimbrian

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromMiddle High Germanër, fromOld High Germanër, fromProto-West Germanic*iʀ(he, it), fromProto-Germanic*iz(he, she, it, they). Cognate withGermaner.

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. (Luserna)he,it

Inflection

[edit]
Personal pronouns (Luserna)
singularplural
1st personibiar
2nd personduiar
3rd personer,si,'zse

References

[edit]

Cornish

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

Ultimately fromProto-Indo-European*per-(in front). SeeWelsher.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Preposition

[edit]

er

  1. for,by,on account of
Derived terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

FromOld Cornisher, fromProto-Celtic*eriros(eagle) (compareBretonerer,Welsheryr,Old Irishirar), fromProto-Indo-European*h₃érō(large bird).

er (an eagle)

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er m (pluraleryonoreres)

  1. eagle
Alternative forms
[edit]

Etymology 3

[edit]

FromMiddle Cornisher, borrowed fromMiddle Englisheir, fromAnglo-Normanheir, fromLatinhērēs.

Noun

[edit]

er m (pluralerys)

  1. heir

Etymology 4

[edit]
Picture dictionary
er
er
er

Click on labels in the image


korf

(Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium. Particularly: “related toarlais? not in GM”)

Noun

[edit]

er m (dualdewer,pluraleryow)

  1. (anatomy)temple

Etymology 5

[edit]

FromProto-Celtic*sagro-. Cognate withWelshhaer.

Noun

[edit]

er m

  1. challenge,defiance,stubbornness,insistence,heresy

Etymology 6

[edit]

See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

Noun

[edit]

er

  1. soft mutation ofger

References

[edit]
  • er” inCornish Dictionary / Gerlyver Kernewek, Akademi Kernewek.

Crimean Tatar

[edit]

Adjective

[edit]

er

  1. every

Czech

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er n (indeclinable)

  1. The name of theLatin script letterR/r.

Further reading

[edit]

Danish

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromOld Danishær,Proto-Germanic*izum, *izud, fromProto-Indo-European*h₁es-(to be). The infinitive of the verb (være) is from a different PIE root; the present tense is suppletive.

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ɛr/,[ɛɐ̯],[ɛɒ̯̽], but often elided in spontaneous speech.

Verb

[edit]

er

  1. present ofvære

Dutch

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

Weak form ofder, the unstressed form ofdaar ("there")

Adverb

[edit]

er

  1. there(unspecific to distance)
  2. pronominal adverb form ofhet:it;him,her,them
    Ik hebermee gewerkt.
    I have workedwith it/them.
    Je kunter de bergenboven zien.
    You can see the mountainsabove it/them.
Usage notes
[edit]
Descendants
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

FromOld Dutchiro, genitive of the personal pronoun (3rd person plural).

Adverb

[edit]

er

  1. (partitive pronoun)ofthem,ofthose (often not translated in English)
    Mijn broer heeft drie kinderen en ik heber twee.
    My brother has three children and I have two. (literally: two of those)
    Ik zieer geen meer.
    I don't see any more (of them).
Synonyms
[edit]
Derived terms
[edit]

SeeCategory:Dutch pronominal adverbs

Related terms
[edit]
See also
[edit]

Anagrams

[edit]

Faroese

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

er

  1. third-personsingularindicativepresent ofvera
    Hanner skipari.
    He is a captain/skipper.
    Honer úr Føroyum.
    She is from the Faroe Islands.
    Taðer í ordan.
    It's all right.

Gagauz

[edit]
Er
Cyrillicер

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

Inherited fromOld Anatolian Turkishیر(yẹr),Proto-Turkic*yẹr. CompareTurkish andAzerbaijaniyer.

Alternative forms

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er (definite accusativeeri,pluralerlär)

  1. theground
    erä düşmääto fall to theground
    erdän bulduunu idihe ate what he took from theground
  2. soil,country,land
    GagauzEriGagauzLand
  3. earth
  4. (astronomy, sometimes capitalized) theEarth
    Synonyms:toprak,dünnää
  5. place,location
  6. (politics)rank,statue
Declension
[edit]
Declension of er
singular(tekil)plural(çoğul)
nominative(yalın)ererlär
definite accusative(belirtme)erierleri
dative(yönelme)eräerlerä
locative(bulunma)erdäerlerdä
ablative(çıkma)erdänerlerdän
genitive(tamlayan)erinerlerin
Derived terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

Inherited fromOld Anatolian Turkishایر(eyer), fromProto-Turkic*ēder. CompareTurkisheyer.

Alternative forms

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er (definite accusativeeri,pluralerlär)

  1. saddle
    Synonym:semer
Declension
[edit]
Declension of er
singular(tekil)plural(çoğul)
nominative(yalın)ererlär
definite accusative(belirtme)erierleri
dative(yönelme)eräerlerä
locative(bulunma)erdäerlerdä
ablative(çıkma)erdänerlerdän
genitive(tamlayan)erinerlerin
Derived terms
[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Baboglu, N. İ.; Baboglu, İ. İ. (1993), “ер”, inGagauzça-Rusça hem Rusça Gagauzça Şkola Sözlüü [Gagauz-Russian and Russian-Gagauz School Dictionary], Chișinău: Vivat,→ISBN, page31
  • Mavrodi M. F., editor (2019), “er”, inGagauzça-rusça sözlük: klaslar 1-4, Komrat: Gagauziya M.V. Maruneviç adına Bilim-Aaraştırma merkezi,→ISBN, page31
  • Kopuşçu M. İ., Todorova S. A., Kiräkova T.İ., editors (2019), “er”, inGagauzça-rusça sözlük: klaslar 5-12, Komrat: Gagauziya M.V. Maruneviç adına Bilim-Aaraştırma merkezi,→ISBN, page62
  • Çebotar, Petri; Dron, Ion (2002), “er”, inGagauzça-Rusça-Romınca Sözlük [Gagauz-Russian-Romanian Dictionary], Chișinău: Pontos Press,→ISBN, page238
  • N. A Baskakov, editor (1972), “ер”, inGagauzsko-Russko-Moldavskij Slovarʹ [Gagauz-Russian-Moldovan Dictionary], Moskva: Izdatelʹstvo Sovetskaja Enciklopedija,→ISBN, page178

German

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromMiddle High Germanër, fromOld High Germanër, fromProto-West Germanic*iʀ, fromProto-Germanic*iz. In northernMiddle High German andOld High German there also existed forms with initialh-, namely Middle High Germanhër, Old High Germanhër, from Proto-Germanic*hiz, whenceCentral Franconian and (from the accusative)Luxembourgishhien. Compare Englishhe. The unusual spellingih- in the formsihm,ihn is not related to this. It was introduced in early modern German to distinguish these forms fromim,in (when*iem,*ien could have been read as*jem,*jen).

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • (standard)IPA(key): /eːr/,[ʔeːɐ̯],[ʔɛɐ̯]
  • (colloquially in unstressed position)IPA(key): /ɐ/

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. (personal)he
    WoistKlaus?Woister?Where is Klaus? Where ishe?
    DiesistmeinHund.ErheißtWaldi.This is my dog.His name is Waldi.
  2. (personal)it (when the grammatical gender of the object/article/thing/animal etc., being referred to, is masculine (der))
    DortstehteinBaum.EristüberhundertJahrealt.There stands a tree.It is more than 100 years old.
  3. (personal)she (when the grammatical gender of the noun being referred to and designating a female person, is masculine (der))
    ImFrauengefängnisversuchteeinHäftlingzuflüchten,abererkamnichtweit.In the women’s prison, an inmate tried to escape, butshe didn’t get very far.
  4. (colloquial)Used in reference to acomputer or other machine whenpersonifying it;it
    Ich habe die Route gerade ins Navi eingegeben, und jetzt sagter, die Autobahn wäre gesperrt.
    I just put the route into the GPS, and nowit says that the highway is closed.
  5. (personal, archaic)alternative spelling ofEr(you (polite))

Declension

[edit]
German personal pronouns
singularpluralsing. and pl.
1st person2nd person
familiar1
3rd person1st person2nd person
familiar1
3rd person2nd person
polite/formal
mfn
nominativeichdu
-e2
ersie
-se2
eswirihrsie
-se2
Sie
Ihr3
genitivemeiner
mein3
deiner
dein3
seiner
sein3
ihrerseiner
sein3
unsereuerihrerIhrer
Euer3
dativemirdirihmihrihmunseuchihnenIhnen
Euch3
accusativemichdichihnsie
-se2
esunseuchsie
-se2
Sie
Euch3

1These forms are sometimes capitalized, especially in letters.   2enclitic,colloquial   3archaic

  • In contemporary German, the genitive forms of personal pronouns are restricted to formal style and are infrequent even then. They may be used:
    • for the genitive object still found in a handful of verbs:Icherbarmtemichseiner. – "I had mercy on him". (Colloquially one would either use the dative case, or a prepositional object, or replace the verb with another.)
    • with certain adjectives or prepositions that govern the genitive, such asstatt ("instead of, in place of"):IchkamstattseinerindieMannschaft. – I joined the team in his place. (This sounds antiquated, for which reasonanseinerStatt oranseinerStelle is preferable.)
  • Older forms/spellings include:
    • jm(dative; 16th century),jn(accusative; 16th century) – distinguished fromim(in the, into the) andin(in, into)
    • ihme(dative)

Derived terms

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

Hunsrik

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • ëyer(Wiesemann spelling system)

Etymology

[edit]

FromOld High Germaner, fromProto-Germanic*iz. Displaced the northern Old High German forms withh-, e.g.,her (seehe).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. he

Inflection

[edit]
Hunsrik personal pronouns
nominativeaccusativedative
procliticencliticstressedunstressedstressedunstressed
singular1st personich
eich
-ichmich
meich
meermer
m'r
2nd person
(informal)
du
dau/Dau
-du,-de
-Dau,-De
dich
deich/Deich
deerder
d'r/D'r
3rd
person
mer;där-erihnenihmem
fsie;die-sesie /ihnsseeer
ehr
re
nes;das
et,'t
'ses
et

-et,-'t
ihmem
plural1st personmeermeruns
uhs
2nd persondeer
Ehr,Dehr
dereich
Auch
3rd personsie;die-sesiesedenne

Further reading

[edit]
  • Boll, Piter Kehoma (2021), “er”, inDicionário Hunsriqueano Riograndense–Português, 3rd edition (overall work in Portuguese), Ivoti:Riograndenser Hunsrickisch

Iberian

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Might be related toBasqueera(way, manner)

Noun

[edit]

er

  1. manner,way

References

[edit]
  • Villamor, Fernando (2020) A basic dictionary and grammar of the Iberian language

Icelandic

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromOld Norseer(is,3rd person singular), analogical leveling of earlieres, fromProto-Germanic*isti, fromProto-Indo-European*h₁ésti.

Use with the 1st person singular is also by analogy with other forms iner-; the Old Norse 1st person singular form wasem.

Verb

[edit]

er

  1. first-personsingularindicativepresent ofvera
    Égerskemmtilegur.
    Iamfun (masculine)
    Hvererég?
    Whoam I?
  2. third-personsingularindicativepresent ofvera

Etymology 2

[edit]

FromOld Norseer, fromProto-Germanic*iz(he), fromProto-Indo-European*ís(he, that).

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. (relative)which
    Maðurer,erJónheitir.
    Thereis amanwho is namedJohn.
    Bærinn,erhúnætlartil.
    Thetown towhich she's heading.
  2. (archaic) in relations with ademonstrative pronoun (this,that,these) orpersonal pronoun (I,we,they), which represents the genitive of arelative pronoun
    Það er bók,ermenn þekkja eigihöfund hennar.
    There is a bookwhoseauthor people don't know.

Conjunction

[edit]

er

  1. (with an "indexical";ábendingarorð) of a place, of a time
    • Judges 2:19
      Ener dómarinn andaðist, breyttu þeir að nýju verr en feður þeirra, með því að elta aðra guði til þess að þjóna þeim og falla fram fyrir þeim. Þeir létu eigi af gjörðum sínum né þrjóskubreytni sinni.
      Butwhen the judge died, the people returned to ways even more corrupt than those of their ancestors, following other gods and serving and worshiping them. They refused to give up their evil practices and stubborn ways.
    Þarer ég kom.
    Therewhence I came.
    Þáer myndin var búin.
    When the movie was finished.
Derived terms
[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Zoëga, Geir T. (1910), “er”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at theInternet Archive

Indonesian

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromDutcher.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

èr (pluraler-er)

  1. The name of theLatin script letterR/r.

Synonyms

[edit]
  • ar(Standard Malay)

See also

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

Italian

[edit]

Article

[edit]

er sg

  1. (Romanesco, Tuscan)dialectal form ofel,whence modernil

Usage notes

[edit]
  • In modern times, the initiale- survives mostly only when the article precedes a word beginning withr- (or more rarely even when the previous word ends in a consonant), such as ine’resto(thechange) where a hypothetical**rresto(change) would be unacceptable because of its homophony withresto since geminatedr’s don't exist in Roman; this is also reflected in the writing where thee- is omitted, as inrcane(thedog) If preceding a word starting with l-, the formel—either due to assimilation or lack of rhotacism and subsequent retention of the original-l—might still be used; indeed, forms such as "el letto" and "el lavoro" are rather more common than their rhotacized counterparts.

Jamtish

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

er

  1. presentindicative ofvara

Japanese

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromEnglish-er, forming novel pseudo-Anglicisms.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Suffix

[edit]

er(アー) (

  1. (slang)Suffix used for people, especially fans.

Derived terms

[edit]

Related terms

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • 難波功士[Koji Nanba] (2006), “〈研究ノート〉“-er”の系譜:サブカルチュラル・アイデンティティの現在 [The History of Neology Using the Suffix ‘-er’ in Japanese: In terms of sub-cultural identities of youths]”, in関西学院大学社会学部紀要[4], number100, pages181–189

Kembra

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er

  1. water

Latin

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • *hēr (unattested, but likely, as aspiration is attested in derived forms such ashērīcius andhērīnāceus, while the base form is attested only a couple of times)

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromProto-Italic*hēr, fromProto-Indo-European*ǵʰḗr(hedgehog) (whence alsoAncient Greekχήρ(khḗr,hedgehog)), a root noun from*ǵʰer-(to be excited, be bristly), whence alsoAncient Greekχοῖρος(khoîros,young pig) andAlbanianderr(pig) from*ǵʰór-yos.[1]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ēr m (genitiveēris);third declension

  1. hedgehog
Usage notes
[edit]

There is some uncertainty as to the exact forms of this word, especially regarding whether the lemma form of this wasēr orēris, as the forms attested in literature could point to either option. Another form,irim (acc. sing.; found in Plautus,Capt. 184), seems to be a spelling variant.

Declension
[edit]

Third-declension noun.

singularplural
nominativeērērēs
genitiveērisērum
dativeērīēribus
accusativeēremērēs
ablativeēreēribus
vocativeērērēs
Related terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er f (indeclinable)

  1. The name of the letterR.
Usage notes
[edit]
  • Multiple Latin names for the letterR,r have been suggested. The most common iser or asyllabicr, although there is some evidence which also supports, as names for the letter,,rrr,ər,, and even (in the fourth- or fifth-century first Antinoë papyrus, which gives Greek transliterations of the Latin names of the Roman alphabet’s letters)ιρρε(irrhe).
Coordinate terms
[edit]
Descendants
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “ēr”, inEtymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN,page193

Further reading

[edit]
  • ēr”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • ēr”, inGaffiot, Félix (1934),Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
  • Arthur E. Gordon,The Letter Names of the Latin Alphabet (University of California Press, 1973; volume 9 ofUniversity of California Publications: Classical Studies), especially pages 30–31, 42–44, and 63

Latvian

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er m (invariable)

  1. The Latvian name of theLatin script letterR/r.

See also

[edit]

Low German

[edit]

Pronoun

[edit]

er

  1. alternative spelling ofehr

Lower Sorbian

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er inan

  1. The name of theLatin script letterr/R.

See also

[edit]

Malay

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Possiblyborrowed fromEnglisher or is apronunciation spelling ofa innon-rhotic Malay accents.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Interjection

[edit]

er

  1. Used to expresshesitation;er,uh.
    Synonym:a
    Er, kita tengah ke mana ni?
    Er, where are we going?

Mambae

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

er

  1. water

References

[edit]
  • Mambai Language Manual: Ainaro Dialect (2001)

Mandarin

[edit]

Romanization

[edit]

er

  1. nonstandard spelling ofēr
  2. nonstandard spelling ofér
  3. nonstandard spelling ofěr
  4. nonstandard spelling ofèr

Usage notes

[edit]
  • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the criticaltonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

Manx

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

    From a conflation of threeOld Irish prepositions:

    1. ar,air(for) (triggering lenition), fromProto-Celtic*ɸare(in front of), fromProto-Indo-European*pr̥h₂i. Cognates includeAncient Greekπαρά(pará,beside) andEnglishfore.
    2. for(on) (triggering no mutation), fromProto-Celtic*uɸer(over, on) (compareWelshar,Bretonwar), fromProto-Indo-European*upér (compareLatinsuper,Ancient Greekὑπέρ(hupér),Old Englishofer).
    3. íar(after) (triggering eclipsis), fromProto-Celtic*eɸirom(after, behind), fromProto-Indo-European*h₁epi.

    Cognates includeIrishar andScottish Gaelicair.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Preposition

    [edit]

    er

    1. on

    Inflection

    [edit]
    Inflection ofer
    Person:simpleemphatic
    singularfirstorrymorrym's
    secondortort's
    thirdmerersyn
    furreeurreeish
    pluralfirstorrinorrinyn
    seconderriuerriuish
    thirdorrooorroosyn

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    er

    1. third-personsingular ofer
      onhim/it

    Derived terms

    [edit]

    Middle Dutch

    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    er

    1. unstressed form ofdāer

    Middle English

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

      FromOld Englishǣr, fromProto-West Germanic*airi, fromProto-Germanic*airi.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adverb

      [edit]

      er

      1. early
      2. earlier
      3. formerly
      4. rather
      Derived terms
      [edit]
      Descendants
      [edit]
      References
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Determiner

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofhire(her,genitive)

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofhire(hers)

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofhire(her,object)

      Etymology 4

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofeere(ear of grain)

      Etymology 5

      [edit]

      Determiner

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofhere(their)

      Middle High German

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOld High Germaner, fromProto-Germanic*iz(he).

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ër

      1. (personal)he

      Inflection

      [edit]
      Middle High German personal pronouns
      nominativegenitivedativeaccusative
      singularfirst personichmīnmirmich
      second persondu,dīndirdich
      third
      person
      mër
      CGhë(r)
      sīnim(e)in
      fsiuir(e)ir(e)sie
      nëȥ
      CG,it
      esim(e)ëȥ
      CG,it
      pluralfirst personwirunserunsuns,unsich
      second personiriuweriu,iuchiuch
      third
      person
      msieir(e)insie
      f
      nsiusiu
      The distinction of the formssiu andsie as shown above is typical of earlierUpper German texts, but was never general. The forms andsi existed additionally and all four were increasingly used without differentiation.

      Descendants

      [edit]
      • Alemannic German:
        Low Alemannic:
        Alsatian:ar,er,ër
        Badisch:er
        High Alemannic:er,är
        Bernese:är
        Lucerne:aer
        Northeastern:ar
        Walser:är
      • Swabian:er,ear
        Swabian Jura:ear
      • Bavarian:er
      • Central Franconian:
        Moselle Franconian:er
        • Hunsrik:er,ëyer(Wiesemann spelling system)
      • East Central German:
        High Prussian:er
        Silesian East Central German:
        Lower Silesian East Central German:a
        Upper Silesian East Central German:a
        North Moravian:ar
        Thuringian:er
        Central Thuringian:er
        West Thuringian:aa
        Upper Saxon German:är
        Meißnisch:är
        Osterländisch:är
        Erzgebirgisch:aorr
        Lusatian:ar
      • German:er
        Berlinerisch:er/ea
      • East Franconian:er,ea
        Unterfränkisch:ar
        Hohenlohisch:er
      • Rhine Franconian:
        Upper Hessian:er
        Lorraine Franconian:ér,éa
        Palatine German:er
        • Pennsylvania German:er
      • Yiddish:ער(er)

      References

      [edit]
      • Benecke, Georg Friedrich; Müller, Wilhelm; Zarncke, Friedrich (1863), “ër”, inMittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch: mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Benecke, Stuttgart: S. Hirzel

      Mòcheno

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromMiddle High Germanër, fromOld High Germanër, fromProto-West Germanic*iʀ(he, it), fromProto-Germanic*iz(he, she, it, they). Cognate withGermaner.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. he,it

      Inflection

      [edit]
      Personal pronouns
      singularplural
      1st personibiar
      2nd personduir
      3rd personer,si,ssei

      References

      [edit]

      Norwegian Bokmål

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      er

      1. present ofvære(tobe)
        Haner ikke hjemme.Heis not home.

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      er

      1. is, are, am (present ofto be)present ofvera
        Eger framand.Iam a stranger.
      2. (auxiliary)be
        Bokaer skriven.The bookis written
        Bøkeneer skrivne.The booksare written.

      References

      [edit]
      • “vera” inThe Nynorsk Dictionary.
      • er på engelsk”, inDinOrdbok, Nynorsk-engelsk oversettelse, 15 October 2018 (last accessed)

      Old Dutch

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-West Germanic*airi, fromProto-Germanic*airiz.

      Preposition

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. before, earlier than

      Descendants

      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • ēr (II)”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek,2012

      Conjunction

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. ere,afore

      Descendants

      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • ēr (III)”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek,2012

      Adverb

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. previously, in an earlier period, in a bygone time
      2. earlier, before a certain time or period

      Descendants

      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • ēr (I)”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek,2012

      Old Frisian

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      FromProto-West Germanic*airi, fromProto-Germanic*airiz. Cognates includeOld Englishǣr,Old Saxonēr andOld Dutchēr.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adverb

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. earlier,previously

      Preposition

      [edit]

      ēr (+ dative)

      1. before(of time)

      Descendants

      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ēr f

      1. alternative form ofēre

      References

      [edit]
      • Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009),An Introduction to Old Frisian: History, Grammar, Reader, Glossary, Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company,→ISBN

      Old High German

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      FromProto-West Germanic*airi, fromProto-Germanic*airiz, whence alsoOld Englishær.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adjective

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. early

      Adverb

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. ere,before
      2. formerly

      Conjunction

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. before,until

      Preposition

      [edit]

      ēr (+dative)

      1. before

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      FromProto-Germanic*aiz, akin toOld Englishār,Old Norseeir.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ēr n

      1. ore
      2. brass
      Descendants
      [edit]

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      FromProto-Germanic*iz(he), akin toGothic𐌹𐍃(is,he),Latinis(he).

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      ër

      1. he
        • c. 825,Tatian,Diatessaron,translation, Chapter 13, verse 20.
          [] Bist thu wīzago? intihër antlingota nein[]
          [] Are you prophet? andhe responded no []
      Inflection
      [edit]
      Old High German personal pronouns
      nominativegenitivedativeaccusative
      singularfirst personih
      (ihha,ihcha)
      mīnmirmih
      second persondīndirdih
      third
      person
      mer (her)(sīn)imu,imoinan,in
      fsiu;,siira (iru,iro)iru,irosia
      nizes,isimu,imoiz
      pluralfirst personwirunsērunsunsih
      second person1iriuwēriuiuwih
      third
      person
      nsieiroim,insie
      fsiosio
      nsiusiu

      1 Also polite singular form

      Descendants
      [edit]
      • Middle High German:ër (see there for further descendants)

      References

      [edit]
      • Joseph Wright,An Old High German Primer

      Old Norse

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      From earlieres, fromProto-Germanic*iz(he; 3rd person personal pronoun). Cognate withGothic𐌹𐍃(is),Old High Germanēr (Germaner).

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. who,which,that
        • verse 76 of theHávamál (1996 translation by Carolyne Larrington)
          en orðstírr / deyr aldregi / hveimer sér góðan getr
          but the glory of reputation never dies, / for the manwho can get himself a good one

      Conjunction

      [edit]

      er

      1. where
      2. when
        Ener hann dó, grét ǫll verǫldin
        andwhen he died, the whole world cried.
      Descendants
      [edit]
      • Icelandic:er
      • Faroese:er
      • Old Swedish:ær

      Usage notes

      [edit]
      • The oldest Icelandic manuscripts from the 12th century still have the older formes, and many poems metrically require the contracted form-s (which is also sporadically present in later manuscripts like the late 13th centuryCodex Regius). In spite of this, most editors chose never to restoreer toes, Finnur Jónsson and the editors of the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages series being important exceptions.

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      From earlieres, fromProto-Norseᛁᛊᛏ(ist), fromProto-Germanic*isti,first/third-personsingularindicativepresent of*wesaną. The final-s was replaced by-r due to analogy to the plural forms of the verb.

      Verb

      [edit]

      er

      1. third-personsingularindicativepresent ofvera
      Usage notes
      [edit]
      • See above; the same rules apply.
      Descendants
      [edit]
      • Icelandic:er
      • Faroese:er
      • Norwegian:
        • Norwegian Bokmål:er
        • Norwegian Nynorsk:er
      • Jamtish:er
      • Elfdalian:ir
      • Old Swedish:ær
      • Danish:er
      • Old Gutnish:ier

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • Zoëga, Geir T. (1910), “er”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at theInternet Archive

      Old Prussian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromProto-Indo-European*h₂er-/*h₂r̥-. Cognate withLithuanianar̃(also, if),Latvianar(also),Ancient Greekἄρ(ár,hence, as well as).

      Preposition

      [edit]

      er +(optionally another preposition)

      1. until,to,up to

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Particle

      [edit]

      er

      1. as well as

      See also

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]
      • Mažiulis, Vytautas (1988), “er”, inPrūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas [Etymological dictionary of Old Prussian]‎[5] (in Lithuanian), volume 1, Vilnius: Mokslas, pages282-283

      Old Saxon

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      FromProto-West Germanic*airi, whence alsoOld Englishær.

      Adjective

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. early
      Declension
      [edit]
      Positive forms of ēr
      Strong declension
      singularplural
      masculinefeminineneutermasculinefeminineneuter
      nominativeērērērēre,ēraēraēr,ēra
      accusativeēran,ērenēraērēra,ēreēraēr,ēra
      genitiveēres,ērasērara,ēraroēres,ērasēraro,ēroro,ēreroēraro,ēroro,ēreroēraro,ēroro,ērero
      dativeērumu,ērum,ērun,ērun,ēron,ēren,ēranēraro,ēraru,ēraraērumu,ērum,ērun,ērun,ēron,ēren,ēranērun,ēron,ērumērun,ēronērun,ēron,ērum
      Weak declension
      singularplural
      masculinefeminineneutermasculinefeminineneuter
      nominativeēro,ēraēra,ēreēra,ēreēron,ērunēron,ērun,ēranēron,ērun
      accusativeēron,ēranērun,ēron,ēranēra,ēreēron,ērunēron,ērun,ēranēron,ērun
      genitiveēren,ēranērun,ēran,ērenēren,ēranērono,ērenoēronoērono,ēreno
      dativeēron,ēren,ēranērun,ēranēron,ēren,ēranēron,ērunēron,ērunēron,ērun

      Adverb

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. before,ere
      2. formerly

      Conjunction

      [edit]

      ēr

      1. before

      Preposition

      [edit]

      ēr [withdative]

      1. before

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      FromProto-Germanic*aiz, whence alsoOld Englishār.

      Noun

      [edit]

      ēr ?

      1. copper,bronze
      2. ore
      Descendants
      [edit]
      • Middle Low German:ēr

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      FromProto-Germanic*airuz. Cognate withOld Englishār,Old Norseárr,Gothic𐌰𐌹𐍂𐌿𐍃(airus).

      Noun

      [edit]

      ēr m

      1. messenger,herald

      Old Tupi

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Back-formation fromera(name).[1]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adjective

      [edit]

      er (IIa class pluriform,R1rer,R2ser,noun formera)

      1. named; having aname

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^Navarro, Eduardo de Almeida (2013), “era”, inDicionário de tupi antigo: a língua indígena clássica do Brasil [Dictionary of Old Tupi: The Classical Indigenous Language of Brazil] (overall work in Portuguese), São Paulo: Global,→ISBN,page109, column 1

      Palauan

      [edit]

      Preposition

      [edit]

      er

      1. Used to indicate a specific objectnoun phrase.
        el moer a medadin the future.
        er a elecha el tutauthis morning.
        rakketer a tenistennis racket.

      References

      [edit]
      • er inPalauan Language Online: Palauan-English Dictionary, attekinged.com.
      • er inPalauan-English Dictionary, attrussel2.com.
      • er inLewis S. Josephs; Edwin G. McManus; Masa-aki Emesiochel (1977),Palauan-English Dictionary, University Press of Hawaii,→ISBN, page88.

      Pennsylvania German

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      CompareGermaner.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. he

      Declension

      [edit]
      Pennsylvania German personal pronouns
      Numbersingularplural
      Person/
      Gender
      1st2nd person3rd person1st2nd3rd
      familiarpolite/formalmfn
      nominativeichdu
      de1
      dihr
      der1
      Sie
      ersie
      se1
      esmir
      mer1
      dihr
      der1
      sie
      dativemir
      mer1
      dir
      der1
      eich
      Ihne
      Ne1
      ihm
      em1
      ihre
      re1
      ihm
      em1
      unseichihne
      ne1
      accusativemichdicheich
      Sie
      ihn
      en1
      sie
      se1
      essie

      1 unstressed

      Polabian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Borrowed fromMiddle Low Germanere /eren /here.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er ?

      1. master,gentleman

      Adverb

      [edit]

      er

      1. alternative form ofar

      References

      [edit]
      • Polański, Kazimierz (1971), “er”, inSłownik etymologiczny języka Drzewian połabskich [Etymological Dictionary of the Polabian Drevani Language] (in Polish), number 2 (ďüzd – ľotü), Wrocław; Warszawa etc.: Ossolineum, page145
      • Polański, Kazimierz; James Allen Sehnert (1967), “er”, inPolabian-English Dictionary, The Hague, Paris: Mouton & Co, page60
      • Olesch, Reinhold (1962), “Herr”, inThesaurus Linguae Dravaenopolabicae [Thesaurus of the Drevani language] (in German), volumes1: A – O, Cologne, Vienna: Böhlau Verlag,→ISBN, page237

      Polish

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      er f

      1. genitiveplural ofera

      Salar

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      From Old Turkicerür.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er

      1. is,are

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      FromProto-Turkic*ēr. Cognate toAzerbaijaniər,Turkisher,Turkmenär.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er

      1. man

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      FromProto-Turkic*ẹ̄r. Cognate toTurkisher,Turkmenīr.

      Adjective

      [edit]

      er

      1. (Dialectal, Mengda, Ejia)early

      Adverb

      [edit]

      er

      1. morning
      2. longtimeago
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      References

      [edit]
      • Tenishev, Edhem (1976), “eř, er”, inStroj salárskovo jazyká [Grammar of Salar], Moscow, page326
      • 马伟 [Ma Wei];朝克 [Chao Ke] (2014), “er”, in撒拉语366条会话读本 [Salar 366 Conversation Reader]‎[6], 1st edition,社会科学文献出版社 [Social Science Literature Press],→ISBN, page105
      • 马伟 (Ma Wei) (2016), “er, erğine”, in濒危语言——撒拉语研究 [Endangered Languages ​​- Salar Language Studies], 青海 (Qinghai): 青海师范大学 (Qinghai Normal University), Unpublished finalized project manuscript (国家社会科学基金项目结项稿, 定稿; National Social Science Fund of China), pages108, 262
      • 林莲云 [Lin Lianyun] (1985), “er”, in撒拉语简志 [A Brief History of Salar]‎[7], Beijing:民族出版社: 琴書店,→OCLC, pages33, 134
      • Ma, Chengjun; Han, Lianye; Ma, Weisheng (December 2010), “er”, in 米娜瓦尔 艾比布拉 (Minavar Abibra), editor,撒维汉词典 (Sāwéihàncídiǎn) [Salar-Uyghur-Chinese dictionary] (in Chinese), 1st edition, Beijing,→ISBN, page103

      Saterland Frisian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      FromOld Frisian-er, fromProto-West Germanic*iʀ. Cognates includeWest Frisianer andGermaner.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. unstressed form ofhie(he)

      See also

      [edit]
      Saterland Frisian personal pronouns
      subject caseobject case
      stressedunstressed
      singular1stiekmie
      2nddudie
      3rdmhieerhim
      fjuzehier
      ndätetdät
      plural1stwieuus
      2ndjiejou
      3rdjozehier

      References

      [edit]
      • Marron C. Fort (2015), “er”, inSaterfriesisches Wörterbuch mit einer phonologischen und grammatischen Übersicht, Buske,→ISBN

      Scots

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      er

      1. (Southern Scots) Second-person simple present form oftibe
      2. (Southern Scots) Plural simple present form oftibe
      3. (Southern Scots) First-person singular simple present form of an obscure form oftibe
        A'mer so!
        (please add an English translation of this usage example)
      Usage notes
      [edit]

      Used emphatically. Seeir.

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      er (pluralers)

      1. Shetland form ofair(beach)

      References

      [edit]

      Swedish

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Contraction of earliereder, fromOld Swedishiþer,idher, fromOld Norseiðʀ, fromProto-Germanic*izwiz, dative/accusative of*jūz, fromProto-Indo-European*yúHs.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er c (neuter possessive onlyert,pluralera)

      1. you (plural objective case)
        Synonym:(highly formal, archaic)eder
        Ni två är här, så jag serer
        You [subject] two are here, so I seeyou [object]
        Det är en ära att få träffaer båda
        It is an honor to [get to] meetyou both
      2. (possessive)your,yours (possessed by the multiple individuals addressed, of one common-gender thing (or possessed by the single individual addressed if used as a polite pronoun – see (sense 3)))
        Synonyms:(informal)eran,(formal, archaic)eder
        Är det härer(an) boll, pojkar?
        Is thisyour ball, boys? ["Eran" is common in casual speech]
        Scenen ärer, pojkar!
        The stage isyours, boys! ["Eran" would be uncommon here, perhaps due to "är er" sounding more pithy]
        Tro påersjälva, pojkar!
        Believe inyourselves, boys! ["Eran" is ungrammatical here]
        Är det härer boll, fröken?
        Is thisyour [polite] ball, Miss? [Dated – see (sense 3). "Eran" would intuitively defeat the purpose of being polite here by being slightly less proper.]
      3. you (second-person singular objective formal) (capitalizedEr, rare in contemporary Swedish – see the notes atni, which mostly also apply here)
        Jag hörer inte, kapten
        I can't hearyou [polite], Captain
        Er is likely to still have been perceived as polite here, despite being used "upwards," which is a difference fromni, hence "mostly also apply." A perfectly "safe" polite phrasing would have been, "Jag hör inte kapten" (I can't hear Captain), using a title.
      4. (reflexive pronoun)reflexive ofni; compareyourselves
        Identifieraer, pojkar!
        Identifyyourselves, boys!
        Ta hand omer, pojkar!
        Take care, boys!
        (literally, “Take care ofyourselves, boys!”)
        Låter inte luras, pojkar!
        Don't be fooled, boys!
        (literally, “Letyourselves not be-fooled, boys!”)
        Para ihoper två och två
        Pair up in twos
        (literally, “Pair togetheryourselves two and two”)
        Skulle ni vilja läraer (att) jonglera?
        Would you guys like to learn how to juggle?
        (literally, “Would you [plural] want-to learn/teachyourselves to juggle?”)
        Identifieraer, fröken!
        Identifyyourself [polite], Miss! [Dated – see (sense 3)]

      Usage notes

      [edit]
      • Seeni for a note on its use as a courteous 2nd person singular.
      • Even thougher (2) and its archaic formeder is the possessive pronoun, it does have a genitive formers andeders, which is only used in expressions likeers majestät(Your Majesty) anders höghet(Your Highness).

      Declension

      [edit]
      Swedish personal pronouns
      NumberPersonnominativeobliquepossessive
      commonneuterplural
      singularfirstjagmig,mej3minmittmina
      seconddudig,dej3dindittdina
      thirdmasculine (person)hanhonom,han2,en5hans
      feminine (person)honhenne,na5hennes
      gender-neutral (person)1henhen,henom7hens
      common (noun)dendendess
      neuter (noun)detdetdess
      indefinitemanoren4enens
      reflexivesig,sej3sinsittsina
      pluralfirstviossvår,våran2vårt,vårat2våra
      secondnierer,eran2,ers6ert,erat2era
      archaicIedereder,eders6edertedra
      thirdde,dom3dem,dom3deras
      reflexivesig,sej3sinsittsina
      1Neologism. Usage has increased since 2010, though it remains limited.
      2Informal
      4Dialectal, also used lately as an alternative toman, to avoid association to the male gender.
      5Informal, somewhat dialectal
      6Formal address
      7Discouraged by theSwedish Language Council

      See also

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]

      Anagrams

      [edit]

      Turkish

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOttoman Turkishایر,ار, fromOld Anatolian Turkishایر(ẹr), fromProto-Turkic*ẹ̄r(early). Related toOld Turkic𐰼(er).

      Adverb

      [edit]

      er

      1. (dialectal)early
        Synonym:erken
      2. (Afyonkarahisar)suhur
        Synonym:sahur
      Usage notes
      [edit]
      • Also found in widespread non-dialectal use in phrases such aser ya da geç ("sooner or later")
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Inherited fromOttoman Turkishار(er), fromOld Anatolian Turkishار(er), fromProto-Turkic*ēr(man). CompareOld Turkic𐰼(er),Azerbaijaniər.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er (definite accusativeeri,pluralerler)

      1. man,male
        Synonyms:adam,erkek
      2. warrior,hero,noble
        Synonyms:yiğit,batur,bahadır,kahraman
      3. conscript,private(soldier of the lowest rank of the army)
        Synonym:nefer
      4. tribesman
      5. askilled person
      6. (now chiefly dialectal, Kars, Rize)husband
        Synonyms:koca,zevç
      7. (religion, mysticism) one who displays a lot of religious virtues, and therefore is thought to have reached God's love;saint
        Synonyms:veli,ermiş
      8. pawn
        Synonym:piyon
      Declension
      [edit]
      Declension ofer
      singularplural
      nominativeererler
      definite accusativeerierleri
      dativeereerlere
      locativeerdeerlerde
      ablativeerdenerlerden
      genitiveerinerlerin
      Possessive forms
      nominative
      singularplural
      1st singularerimerlerim
      2nd singularerinerlerin
      3rd singularerierleri
      1st pluralerimizerlerimiz
      2nd pluralerinizerleriniz
      3rd pluralerlerierleri
      definite accusative
      singularplural
      1st singularerimierlerimi
      2nd singularerinierlerini
      3rd singularerinierlerini
      1st pluralerimizierlerimizi
      2nd pluralerinizierlerinizi
      3rd pluralerlerinierlerini
      dative
      singularplural
      1st singularerimeerlerime
      2nd singularerineerlerine
      3rd singularerineerlerine
      1st pluralerimizeerlerimize
      2nd pluralerinizeerlerinize
      3rd pluralerlerineerlerine
      locative
      singularplural
      1st singularerimdeerlerimde
      2nd singularerindeerlerinde
      3rd singularerindeerlerinde
      1st pluralerimizdeerlerimizde
      2nd pluralerinizdeerlerinizde
      3rd pluralerlerindeerlerinde
      ablative
      singularplural
      1st singularerimdenerlerimden
      2nd singularerindenerlerinden
      3rd singularerindenerlerinden
      1st pluralerimizdenerlerimizden
      2nd pluralerinizdenerlerinizden
      3rd pluralerlerindenerlerinden
      genitive
      singularplural
      1st singulareriminerlerimin
      2nd singularerininerlerinin
      3rd singularerininerlerinin
      1st pluralerimizinerlerimizin
      2nd pluralerinizinerlerinizin
      3rd pluralerlerininerlerinin
      Predicative forms
      singularplural
      1st singularerimerlerim
      2nd singularersinerlersin
      3rd singularer
      erdir
      erler
      erlerdir
      1st pluralerizerleriz
      2nd pluralersinizerlersiniz
      3rd pluralerlererlerdir
      Derived terms
      [edit]
      Related terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 3

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      er

      1. second-personsingularimperative ofermek

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • er”, inTurkish dictionaries, Türk Dil Kurumu
      • er”, inTürkiye'de halk ağzından derleme sözlüğü [Compilation Dictionary of Popular Speech in Turkey] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu,1963–1982
      • Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–), “er”, inNişanyan Sözlük
      • Ayverdi, İlhan (2010), “er”, inMisalli Büyük Türkçe Sözlük, a reviewed and expanded single-volume edition, Istanbul: Kubbealtı Neşriyatı
      • XIII. Yüzyılından Beri Türkiye Türkçesiyle Yazılmış Kitaplarından Toplanan Tanıklarıyle Tarama Sözlüğü (Türk Dil Kurumu yayınları;212)‎[8] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu,1963–1977
      • Çağbayır, Yaşar (2007), “er”, inÖtüken Türkçe Sözlük (in Turkish), Istanbul: Ötüken Neşriyat,pages1458-1459

      Uzbek

      [edit]
      Other scripts
      Arabic (Yangi Imlo)
      Cyrillicэр
      Latiner
      Afghan Uzbekاېر(er)

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited fromProto-Turkic*ēr.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er (pluralerlar)

      1. man
        Synonym:erkak
      2. husband
        Synonym:zavj
        Antonym:xotin

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Welsh

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      FromMiddle Welshyr, fromProto-Brythonic*er, fromProto-Celtic*ɸeri, ultimately fromProto-Indo-European*per-(in front). CompareCornisher(for, by),Ancient Greekπερί(perí,about, peri-),Latinper(through).[1]

      Conjunction

      [edit]

      er

      1. although
        • 2018 September 28, “Cymraeg y Wladfa a Chymraeg Cymru - beth yw'r gwahaniaethau?”, inBBC Cymru Fyw:
          Nid y Sbaeneg (er y byddai hynny'n syniad da hefyd) ond Cymraeg arbennig y Wladfa.
          Not Spanish (although that would also be a good idea) but the particular Welsh of Y Wladfa.
        • 2019 June 13, Llinos Lee, “Y Barri: Mwy na dim ond 'Gavin & Stacey'”, inBBC Cymru Fyw:
          Ges i fy magu yn Y Barri, acer mod i wedi symud i ffwrdd i'r brifysgol, …
          I was brought up in Barry, andalthough I moved away for university, …

      Preposition

      [edit]

      er (triggers soft mutation)

      1. (literary)since
        Synonym:ers
      2. (archaic)in spite of,despite
        Synonym:er gwaethaf
      3. (archaic)in order to
        Synonyms:er mwyn,i
      4. (archaic)for the sake of
        Synonym:er mwyn
      5. (obsolete)because of
        Synonyms:achos,o achos,oherwydd,oblegid
      6. (obsolete)for,in exchange for
        Synonym:am
      7. (obsolete)resulting in
      8. (obsolete)through
        Synonyms:trwy,drwy

      Usage notes

      [edit]
      • In very formal or literary language,er is used when a specific start time is mentioned.
      Saif y castell ymaer 1284.
      The castle has stood heresince 1284.
      Y mae’r castell yn adfailer pan fu farw’r brenin olaf.
      The castle has been a ruinsince the last king died.
      Ers is used when the beginning of the time period is not mentioned.
      Mae’r castell ymaers canrifoedd.
      The castle has been herefor centuries.
      In less formal registers,ers is used in all instances.

      Inflection

      [edit]
      Personal forms (literary)
      singularplural
      first personeroferom
      second personeroteroch
      third personerddom
      erddif
      erddynt

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.

      Noun

      [edit]

      er f (pluraleriau)

      1. The name of theLatin script letterR/r.

      See also

      [edit]

      Mutation

      [edit]
      Mutated forms ofer
      radicalsoftnasalh-prothesis
      erunchangedunchangedher

      Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
      All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke,et al., editors (1950–present), “er”, inGeiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

      West Frisian

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      er

      1. clitic form ofhy used before the object or after the verb.
      Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=er&oldid=89549331"
      Categories:
      Hidden categories:

      [8]ページ先頭

      ©2009-2026 Movatter.jp