sar

See also: Sar and Appendix:Variations of "sar"

Aromanian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Latin saliō. Compare Romanian sări, sar.

Verb

sar (third-person singular present sari or sare, past participle sãritã)

  1. I jump, leap.
  • sãriri / sãrire
  • sãrit
  • arsar

Burushaski

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [saɾ]

Noun

sar (plural saro)

  1. rabbit

References

  • Sadaf Munshi (2015), “Word Lists”, in Burushaski Language Documentation Project

Chuukese

Adjective

sar

  1. over, finished

Kurdish

Etymology

From Proto-Iranian [Term?], from Proto-Indo-Iranian [Term?], from Proto-Indo-European *gel- (cold). Compare Persian سرد (sard, cold), Sanskrit शीत (śīta, cold), and English cold.

Adjective

sar (comparative sartir, superlative sartirîn)

  1. (Kurmanji) cold

Middle English

Etymology

From Old English sār.

Noun

sar

  1. Alternative form of sore

Descendants


Old Danish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old Norse sár, from Proto-Germanic *sairą.

Noun

sār n (genitive sārs, plural sār)

  1. (Scanian) wound
    • c. 1210, "Far horkarl sar", Scanian Law, chapter 216.
      Far horkarl sar innæn siangu mæþ annærs manz kunu […]
      If a male prostitute gets wounds in bed with another man's wife […]

Descendants


Old English

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *sairaz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sɑːr/

Adjective

sār

  1. sore

Derived terms

Noun

sār n

  1. pain
  2. soreness

Descendants


Romani

Adverb

sar

  1. how
  2. as

Romanian

Verb

sar

  1. inflection of sări:
    1. first-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
    2. third-person plural present indicative
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