gyr

التعريفات والمعاني

== Translingual == === Symbol === gyr (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Guarayu. === See also === Wiktionary’s coverage of Guarayu terms == English == === Noun === gyr (plural gyrs) Clipping of gyrfalcon. == Old English == === Etymology === From Proto-West Germanic *gurwī, from Proto-Germanic *gurwijaz (“manure, dung, mud”), related to Proto-Germanic *gurą (“manure”). Cognate with Old Frisian gere, jere, iere (“liquid manure, dirty water”). Alternatively, perhaps derived from Old English gyru. === Pronunciation === IPA(key): /ɡyr/ Rhymes: -yr === Noun === gyr m mud fen, marsh ==== Declension ==== Strong a-stem: ==== Related terms ==== gor gyra gyru ==== Descendants ==== Middle English: gure, gire, girre (adjective) >? Middle English: gorry English: gory === References === Joseph Bosworth; T. Northcote Toller (1898), “gyr”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, second edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press. == Spanish == === Noun === gyr m (plural gyrs) Gyr (breed of cattle) == Sudovian == === Etymology === From Proto-Balto-Slavic *garā́ˀ (“mountain”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷerH- (“to elevate”). Cognate with Lithuanian girià (“primeval forest”), Latvian dziŗa (“woods”), dzire, Old Prussian garian (“tree”). === Noun === gyr nature reserve, primeval forest ==== See also ==== miſzta === References === == Welsh == === Etymology === From Middle Welsh gyr, from Proto-Celtic *(fare)-koro (“shot, blow”), ultimately from the root of Old Irish foceird (“to cast, throw”); see there for details. === Noun === gyr m (plural gyrroedd) (obsolete) drive, thrust Synonym: gyriant flock, drove Synonyms: diadell, praidd, haid ==== Derived terms ==== gyrru (“to drive”) === Mutation ===