Clipping ofEnglish Ore jón .
ore
( international standards ) ISO 639-3 language code forOrejón . FromMiddle English or ,oor , blend ofOld English ōra ( “ ore, unwrought metal ” ) andār ( “ brass, copper, bronze ” ) , the first a derivate ofear ( “ earth ” ) , the second fromProto-West Germanic *aiʀ , fromProto-Germanic *aiz , fromProto-Indo-European *áyos, h₂éyos .
CompareOld Norse eir ( “ brass, copper ” ) ,German ehern ( “ of metal, of iron ” ) ,Gothic 𐌰𐌹𐌶 ( aiz ,“ ore ” ) ; alsoDutch oer ( “ ferrous hardpan; bog iron ore ” ) . CompareLatin aes ( “ bronze, copper ” ) ,Avestan 𐬀𐬌𐬌𐬀𐬵 ( aiiah ) ,Sanskrit अयस् ( áyas ,“ copper, iron ” ) .
ore (countable anduncountable ,plural ores )
Manganese ore (psilomelane ) Rock or other material that contains valuable or utilitarian materials; primarily a rock containingmetals orgems for which it is typicallymined andprocessed .Hyponyms: copper ore ,iron ore ,tin ore 2014 April 21, “Subtle effects ”, inThe Economist [1] , volume411 , number8884 , archived fromthe original on20 January 2021 :Manganism has been known about since the 19th century, when miners exposed toores containing manganese, a silvery metal, began to totter, slur their speech and behave like someone inebriated.
rock that contains materials that can be economically extracted and processed
Albanian:dhengritës m ,xeheror (sq) m Arabic:رِكَاز m ( rikāz ) ,خَامَة f ( ḵāma ) Armenian:հանքաքար (hy) ( hankʻakʻar ) Azerbaijani:filiz (az) ,külçə Basque:mea Belarusian:руда́ f ( rudá ) Bulgarian:ру́да (bg) f ( rúda ) Burmese:သတ္တုရိုင်း (my) ( sattu.ruing: ) Catalan:mena (ca) f Chinese:Cantonese:礦石 / 矿石 ( kong3 sek6 ) Hakka:礦石 / 矿石 ( khóng-sa̍k ) Hokkien:礦石 / 矿石 (zh-min-nan) ( khòng-chio̍h ) Mandarin:礦石 / 矿石 (zh) ( kuàngshí ) Czech:ruda (cs) f Danish:malm (da) c Dutch:erts (nl) n Elfdalian:mom m ,malm Esperanto:erco (eo) Estonian:maak (et) Faroese:málmur m Finnish:malmi (fi) French:minerai (fr) m Galician:mineral (gl) m Georgian:მადანი (ka) ( madani ) German:Erz (de) n Alemannic German:Ärzt Greek:μετάλλευμα (el) n ( metállevma ) Greenlandic:saviminissaq Hebrew:עַפְרָה (he) f ( afrá ) Hindi:अयस्क m ( ayask ) Hungarian:érc (hu) Icelandic:málmgrýti (is) Ido:erco (io) Indonesian:bijih (id) Irish:mianach m Italian:minerale (it) m Japanese:鉱石 (ja) ( こうせき, kōseki ) Kazakh:кентас ( kentas ) Khmer:រ៉ែ ( rae ) Korean:광석(鑛石) (ko) ( gwangseok ) Kurdish:Northern Kurdish:maden (ku) Kyrgyz:кен таш ( ken taş ) Lao:ສິນແຮ່ ( sin hǣ ) ,ແຮ່ ( hǣ ) Latgalian:ruda f Latvian:rūda (lv) f Lithuanian:rūda f Luxembourgish:Äerz n Macedonian:руда f ( ruda ) Malay:bijih Malayalam:അയിര് (ml) ( ayirŭ ) Manchu:ᠨᡝᠮᡠ ( nemu ) Maori:tokahuke ,tokakonganuku Marathi:धातुक n ( dhātuk ) Mongolian:Cyrillic:хүдэр (mn) ( xüder ) Mongolian:ᠬᠦᠳᠡᠷ ( küder ) Northern Sami:málbma Norwegian:Bokmål:malm (no) m Nynorsk:malm m Occitan:mena (oc) f Old Church Slavonic:Cyrillic:роуда f ( ruda ) Old East Slavic:руда f ( ruda ) Old English:ora m Ottoman Turkish:معدن ( maʿden ) ,جوهر ( cevher ) Pashto:معدن m ( ma'dan ) Persian:معدن (fa) ( ma'dan ) ,سنگ معدن ( sang-e ma'dan ) Polish:ruda (pl) f Portuguese:minério (pt) m Romanian:minereu (ro) n Romansch:mineral m Russian:руда́ (ru) f ( rudá ) Sami:Southern Sami:maalme Serbo-Croatian:Cyrillic:ру́да f Roman:rúda (sh) f Slovak:ruda (sk) f Slovene:ruda (sl) f Sorbian:Lower Sorbian:ruda f Upper Sorbian:ruda f Spanish:mena (es) f ,mineral (es) m Swahili:mtapo Swedish:malm (sv) c Tagalog:dukalin ,dulang Tajik:маъдан ( ma'dan ) Telugu:ఖనిజము (te) ( khanijamu ) Thai:แร่ (th) ( rɛ̂ɛ ) ,สินแร่ ( sǐn-rɛ̂ɛ ) Turkish:maden (tr) Turkmen:magdan Ukrainian:руда́ f ( rudá ) Uzbek:ruda (uz) Vietnamese:quặng (vi) Volapük:mün (vo) Welsh:mwyn (cy) m Yiddish:אַרץ n ( arts ) ,רודע f ( rude )
Borrowed fromLatin ora .[ 1]
ore (plural ores )
A unit ofcurrency used inEngland around the 10th to 12th centuries.Synonym: ora A southern variant ofware ( “ seaweed ” ) .[ 2]
ore (uncountable )
( dialectal , archaic ) Seaweed , especially that which iswashed up ashore.Possibly originating as a figurative use ofEtymology 1 , with Leominster's "ore" representing the wealth of the town.[ 3]
ore (uncountable )
( historical ) A type of finewool , especially of the type historically produced in the market town ofLeominster ,Herefordshire .a. 1638 (date written),Ben Jonson , “For the Honour of Wales ”, inThe Works of Beniamin Jonson, [ … ] (Third Folio ), London: [ … ] Thomas Hodgkin, forH[ enry] Herringman , E. Brewster, T. Bassett, R[ ichard] Chiswell, M. Wotton, G. Conyers, published1692 ,→OCLC ,page608 , column 1:But then theore ofLempſter / By Got is never a Sempſter; / That when he is ſpun,ore did, / Yet match him with hir thrid
Chiefly used in the form "Lemster ore"; Lemster is a shortened pronunciation of Leominster. ore
Obsolete form ofover .ore (plural ore )
Alternative form oföre .REO ,ROE ,roe ,eor ,Reo ,Roe ,RoE ,o'er ,reo ,OER ,EOR ore
plural ofoor ore
indefinite dative / ablative singular oforë FromLatin hōra . CompareRomanian oară .
ore f (plural or ,definite articulation ora )
atime ,instance ore inan
dough ore
child FromOld French , fromLatin aura ( “ breeze ” ) .
ore f (plural ores )
( metallurgy ) This term needs a translation to English. Please help out andadd a translation , then remove the text{{rfdef }}. ore
inflection oforar : first / third-person singular present subjunctive third-person singular imperative ore
we ( exclusive ) Ore roha'ã. ―We ( excluding the listener, we and not you ) try.Ñande jaháta okápe haore ropytáta ko yvyra pýpe. ―We( all, everyone ) will go outside andwe ( not everyone, just me and some other people ) will stay by this tree. ore
our ( possessive determiner of ore ) Kóvaore mbo'ehao. ―This isour ( and not your ) school. Guaraní personal pronouns
ore f
plural ofora ore
Rōmaji transcription ofおれ ōre
ablative singular ofōs andōris “ore ”, inHarry Thurston Peck, editor (1898 ),Harper’s Dictionary of Classical Antiquities , New York: Harper & Brothers Cognate withGuaraní ore .
ore
we ( exclusive ) FromOld Dutch ōra , fromProto-Germanic *ausô . The feminine form was lost during the Middle Dutch period, but is still visible in the modern Dutch fossilized expressionter ore komen .
ôre n or f
ear Weak neuter noun singular plural nominative ôre ôren accusative ôre ôren genitive ôren ôren dative ôre ôren
Weak feminine noun singular plural nominative ôre ôren accusative ôre ôren genitive ôre ,ôren ôren dative ôre ,ôren ôren
From the oblique forms ofOld English ār ( “ oar ” ) , fromProto-West Germanic *airu , fromProto-Germanic *airō .
ore (plural ores )
oar ( lever for propelling aboat ) From the oblique forms ofOld English ār ( “ honour ” ) , fromProto-West Germanic *aiʀu , fromProto-Germanic *aizō .
ore (uncountable )
honour ,respect ( recognition ofvalue ) grace ,favour ( positivity towardssomeone ) ::permission ,approval ( to engage in abehaviour ) mercy ,clemency ( remission ofpunishment ) respite ,security ( safety from harm ) From bothOld English ōra ( “ ore, unwrought metal ” ) andOld English ār ( “ brass ” ) .
ore (plural ores )
ore ( rock that containsmetal ) FromOld English ōra ( “ shore ” ) .
ore (plural ores )
edge ,shore ore
alternative form ofoure ( “ aurochs ” ) ore
alternative form ofoure ( “ our ” ) ore
alternative form ofyour ore
( chiefly Early Middle English and West Midland ) alternative form ofhere ( “ their ” ) ore
alternative form ofhore ( “ muck ” ) Old French ore .
ore
now 15th century , Rustichello da Pisa (original author), Mazarine Master (scribe),The Travels of Marco Polo , page4, line 2 :des choses lesquelles nous ne conterons pasore of things we will not speak of now Inherited fromOld High German ōra , fromProto-Germanic *ausô .
IPA (key ) : ( before 13th CE ) /ˈoːrə/ ōre n
ear Declension ofōre (weak neuter )
Alemannic German:Oor Bavarian:Oar Central Franconian:Uhr ,Ohr German:Ohr Rhine Franconian:Pennsylvania German:Ohr Vilamovian:ür Yiddish:אויער ( oyer ) Benecke, Georg Friedrich; Müller, Wilhelm; Zarncke, Friedrich (1863 ), “ôre ”, inMittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch: mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Benecke , Stuttgart: S. Hirzel FromOld Saxon ōra , fromProto-Germanic *ausô .
ôre n
ear (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
ore f
Amine , place in which ore is dug Weak:
For earlier*aore , fromLatin hāc hōrā ( “ (in) this hour ” ) .
ore
now ore oblique singular , f (oblique plural ores ,nominative singular ore ,nominative plural ores )
alternative form ofhoure ( “ hour ” ) From an Proto-Yoruboid root for "female," compare withIgala óre ( “ female animal ” ) ,Itsekiri ore ( “ mother ” ) .
ore
female Synonym: obìnrẹn Antonym: akọ ( “ male ” ) Alternative scripts
𑀑𑀭𑁂 ( Brahmi script ) ओरे ( Devanagari script ) ওরে ( Bengali script ) ඔරෙ ( Sinhalese script ) ဩရေ orဢေႃရေ ( Burmese script ) โอเร ( Thai script ) ᩋᩰᩁᩮ ( Tai Tham script ) ໂອເຣ ( Lao script ) ឲរេ ( Khmer script ) 𑄃𑄮𑄢𑄬 ( Chakma script ) ore
locative singular masculine / neuter &vocative singular feminine &accusative plural masculine ofora ( “ lower ” ) ore
inflection oforar : first / third-person singular present subjunctive third-person singular imperative ore
inflection oforă : plural genitive / dative singular ore (Cyrillic spelling оре )
third-person singular present oforati ore
inflection oforar : first / third-person singular present subjunctive third-person singular imperative ore
gold ore
dust ,dirt Òré (Cyperus articulatus )Òré (Cyperus esculentus )òré
theplants Cyperus articulatus andCyperus esculentus , commonly used in makingstraw sleeping mats ( by extension ) astraw sleeping mat , made from the òré plantSynonym: ẹní òré Non-standard spelling ofoore ( “ kindness, goodness, blessing ” ) , seeire ,ure ,rere
ore
alternative form ofoore ( “ kindness, goodness, blessing, favor ” ) alternative form ofoore ( “ obligation ” )