templar

See also: Templar and templář

English

Noun

templar (plural templars)

  1. (law, Britain) A barrister having chambers in the Inner Temple or Middle Temple.

Adjective

templar (comparative more templar, superlative most templar)

  1. (obsolete) Of or relating to a temple.
    • Samuel Taylor Coleridge
      solitary, family, and templar devotion

Anagrams


Aragonese

Alternative forms

  • templlar

Etymology

From Latin temperāre, present active infinitive of temperō.

Verb

templar

  1. to temper
  2. to reduce
  3. to warm up
  4. to tune

Conjugation


Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Borrowed from Medieval Latin templarius (cf. Old French templier, English templar), from Latin templum (temple).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /těmplaːr/
  • Hyphenation: tem‧plar

Noun

tèmplār m (Cyrillic spelling тѐмпла̄р)

  1. Templar

Declension

References

  • templar” in Hrvatski jezični portal

Spanish

Etymology

From Old Spanish temprar, tenprar, from Latin temperāre, present active infinitive of temperō; the -l- in the modern Spanish word was a result of hypercorrection of a popular tendency to use -pr- in place of -pl- in many medieval Ibero-Romance languages (something which persisted in Portuguese, cf. praça, prato)[1]. Doublet of temperar, a borrowing.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /temˈplaɾ/, [t̪ẽmˈplaɾ]

Verb

templar (first-person singular present templo, first-person singular preterite templé, past participle templado)

  1. to temper
  2. to cool down
  3. to warm up
  4. to cool off
  5. to calm down, chill out
  6. to tune (a musical instrument)

Conjugation

      Derived terms

      References

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