avur
التعريفات والمعاني
== Crimean Tatar ==
=== Adjective ===
avur (Northern dialect)
heavy
==== Usage notes ====
Literary form: ağır
==== Declension ====
== Karaim ==
=== Etymology ===
From Proto-Turkic *agïr.
=== Adjective ===
avur
heavy
=== References ===
N. A. Baskakov, S.M. Šapšala, editor (1973), “avur”, in Karaimsko-Russko-Polʹskij Slovarʹ [Karaim-Russian-Polish Dictionary], Moscow: Moskva, →ISBN
== Old High German ==
=== Alternative forms ===
afur, afar, avar
=== Etymology ===
From Proto-Germanic *afar, *abar, *abur (“after, following”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂epó (“away, from”). Akin to Old English eafora (“offspring, successor, descendant”), Old High German after (“after, behind”), Old English æfter (“after, following”). More at after.
=== Conjunction ===
avur
but
==== Descendants ====
Middle High German: aber, aver
Alemannic German:
Swabian: abr
Bavarian: owa
Central Franconian:
Eifel: äwwer
Hunsrik: awer
Kölsch: ävver
Wäller Platt: aver, ouwwer
East Central German:
Upper Saxon German: abor, aar, awer, awor
German: aber
Luxembourgish: awer, ower
Rhine Franconian:
Pennsylvania German: awwer, awer
Yiddish: אָבער (ober)