Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *Aur-
Meaning: ore, ore-ground
Tokharian: ? B warañce 'sand' (Adams 578)
Germanic: *aur-a- n., m.; *aur-i- c.; *ūr-a- n.
Latin: urium, -ī n. `schaumartige Erde bei der Goldgewinnung'
Celtic: OIr ūr `Erde, Lehm'
Russ. meaning: руда, рудоносная почва
References: WH
piet-meaning,piet-tokh,piet-germ,piet-lat,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database


Germanic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Germanic: *aura-n, -z; *auri-z; *ūra-n
Meaning: sand containing iron, ore
IE etymology: IE etymology
Gothic: *aurahjōn-s `monuments, tombs'
Old Norse: aur-r `Eisenartiger Sand, Gries', eyr-r f. `flache Küstenstrecke'; ūr n. `Metallschlacke, Abfall'; ǖr-r m. `morsches, sprödes Eisen';
Norwegian: aur, aure
Swedish: ör
Danish: dial. ör `Sandbank'
Old English: ēar `Erde', ēor `Kies'
English: ore
Dutch: { oer `eisenhaltiger Sand' }
Middle Low German: { ūr `oer' }
Low German: { ūr `eisenhaltiger Sand' }
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-got,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-swed,germet-dan,germet-oengl,germet-engl,germet-dutch,germet-mlg,germet-lg,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
17668571792890
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov