Flur

See also: flur and flùr

German

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fluːɐ̯/
  • Rhymes: -uːɐ̯

Etymology 1

From Middle High German vluor, from Old High German fluor, from Proto-Germanic *flōraz. The word originally meant “arable land” in High German (see etymology 2). The modern sense stems from Middle Low German vlōr. Cognate with Dutch vloer, English floor (from Old English flōr).

Noun

Flur m (genitive Flurs or Flures, plural Flure)

  1. hall, hallway, corridor, stairwell
    Wir warten im Flur.
    We're waiting in the hallway.
    Sie wohnen auf demselben Flur.
    They live on the same corridor.
Usage notes
  • Flur can refer both to a part of a house that connects different units, and to a part of an apartment that connects different rooms. The former can be specified as Hausflur, the latter can be specified as Diele, Korridor, or Wohnungsflur.
  • Unlike its English cognate floor, the German word means neither “storey” nor “ground”.
Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms

Etymology 2

The same as etymology 1, but secondarily distinguished per feminine gender. Modern Flur (f.) continues the original High German sense of the word.

Noun

Flur f (genitive Flur, plural Fluren)

  1. farmland; field or lea, heath
    durch Wald und Flur
    through forest and field
Declension
Derived terms
  • Flurbereinigung
  • Flurbuch
  • Flurhüter
  • Flurname
  • Flurwächter
  • Flurzwang
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