zeer

English

Noun

zeer (plural zeers)

  1. Alternative form of zir (water jug)
    • 1908, Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories, Report of the Wellcome Tropical Research Laboratories at the Gordon Memorial College, Khartoum v. 3, 1908 suppl:
      Cholera is in the majority of cases a water-borne disease, due to water having become Cholera-contaminated [...] Water from zeers and goulahs should be looked upon with suspicion unless these are carefully watched and cleaned.
    • 1910, Sir Ronald Ross, The Prevention of Malaria, page 535:
      Before leaving Khartoum the bilge water in the various sections should be oiled by pouring petroleum on the surface [...] collections will harbour mosquito larvae, and attention should therefore be paid to the water-closet cisterns, zeers and tanks.

Crimean Tatar

Noun

zeer

  1. A poison

Declension


Dutch

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /zeːr/
  • Rhymes: -eːr
  • (file)

Etymology 1

From Middle Dutch sêer, from Old Dutch sēr, from Proto-Germanic *sairaz.

Adjective

zeer (comparative zeerder, superlative zeerst)

  1. sore, painful
  2. painful, grieving
  3. hurtful
  4. affected by a painful skin syndrome
Inflection
Inflection of zeer
uninflected zeer
inflected zere
comparative zeerder
positive comparative superlative
predicative/adverbial zeerzeerderhet zeerst
het zeerste
indefinite m./f. sing. zerezeerderezeerste
n. sing. zeerzeerderzeerste
plural zerezeerderezeerste
definite zerezeerderezeerste
partitive zeerszeerders
Derived terms
  • zeerheid
  • zeerte
  • zeeroog
  • zeerkop
  • zeerhoofdig

Etymology 2

From Middle Dutch sêer, from Old Dutch sēr, from Proto-Germanic *sairą.

Noun

zeer n (plural zeren, diminutive zeertje n)

  1. A physical pain, ache, hurt
  2. grief, suffering
  3. (archaic) A sore spot; crust on a wound, boil etc.
  4. (archaic) A cause of physical pain, notably disease; discomfort, uneasiness
  5. (obsolete) A flaw, fault, sin, defect
Synonyms
Derived terms
  • bezeren
  • buikzeer, hartzeer, hoofdzeer, koningszeer, kwaadzeer, tandzeer
  • zeerachtig, zeerbaar, zerig, kleinzerig
  • zeerdom
  • zeering
  • zeerwording

Etymology 3

From Middle Dutch sêre, from Old Dutch sēro.

Adverb

zeer

  1. (literally) sorely, painfully, notably in zeer doen 'to hurt'
  2. (figuratively) very, to a high degree or intensity
Derived terms
  • evenzeer, hoezeer, zeerna, zozeer, ten zeerste
  • zeereerwaard, zeergeacht, zeergeëerd, zeergeleerd, zeergestreng (emphatic adjectives; can all remain split: zeer ...)

Anagrams

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