English

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Mimetic (sound of hesitation).

Interjection

edit

er

  1. (informal) Said when hesitating in speech.
    Synonyms: ah, eh, erm, uh, um
    • 1970, Richard Carpenter, Catweazle, Harmondsworth: Puffin Books, page 11:
      Er...Feathered Omen, hoot not,” he continued uneasily, “Son of Tanit, hoot not!”
    • 2007 August 24, William Grimes, “Uh, Lead My Rips: No More Bloopers”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 4 January 2013:
      As the years go by, speech reverts to childhood levels of disfluency, with more pauses, more errors, more repeated words, but even the peak years are not great: up to 8 percent of the average person’s word output consists of meaningless fillers and placeholders like um, uh and er.
    • 2012, Linda Miller, Desire and Destiny:
      If he—er—disappears—well, it seems to me that we'd both benefit.
    • 2019 December 10, Yacht Club Games, "Story" (Mona), in Shovel Knight Showdown (version 4.1), Nintendo Switch:
      Liquid Samurai: 'FORMLESS AND INFINITE ARE WE, THE LIQUID SAMURAI. I SERVE MY QUEEN, AS WE HAVE FOR COUNTLESS--' / Mona: 'HEY, I DON'T MEAN TO INTERRUPT, BUT YOU SEEM LIKE YOU'RE MADE OF POWERFUL STUFF. CAN I, ER, STUDY YOU?'
Translations
edit

Verb

edit

er (third-person singular simple present ers, present participle erring, simple past and past participle erred)

  1. (informal, transitive, intransitive) To utter the word er when hesitating in speech.
    Synonyms: ah, eh, um; hem and haw
    um and er
    He ummed and erred his way through the presentation.

Noun

edit

er (plural ers)

  1. An occurrence of the interjection "er".
    • 2007 August 24, William Grimes, “Uh, Lead My Rips: No More Bloopers”, in The New York Times[2], archived from the original on 4 January 2013:
      Although Shakespeare refers to “hums and ha’s,” sifting through etiquette manuals and public-speaking guides turns up scant evidence of a prohibition against ums, ers and uhs, which are profuse in the first recording of Thomas Edison’s voice, in 1888. Mr. Erard, rather ingeniously, traces the prohibition on um and other speech flaws to the advent of radio in the early 1920s.

Etymology 2

edit

Noun

edit

er (plural ers)

  1. The name of the Cyrillic script letter Р / р.

Anagrams

edit

Afrikaans

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er (plural erre or ers, diminutive erretjie)

  1. The name of the Latin script letter R/r.

Alemannic German

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle High German ër, from Old High German ër, from Proto-Germanic *iz. Cognate with German er.

Pronoun

edit

er m

  1. (personal) he; it

Declension

edit
Alemannic German personal pronouns
nominative accusative dative possessive m
singular 1st person ich, i mich, mi mir, mier, mer min, miin
2nd
person
familiar du dich, di dir, dier, der din, diin
polite Si Ine, Ene, -ne Ire
3rd
person
m er in, en im sin, siin
f si ire
n es, 's, -s im sin, siin
plural 1st person mir, mer üs, öis, ois, eus üse, öise, oise, euse
2nd person ir, ier öi, eu öie, eure
3rd person si ine, ene, -ne ire

Bavarian

edit

Alternative forms

edit
  • ea (phonetic spelling)
  • a (unstressed form)

Etymology

edit

From Middle High German ër, from Old High German ër (he). Cognate with German er.

Pronunciation

edit

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. he

See also

edit
Bavarian personal pronouns
nominative accusative dative
stressed unstressed stressed unstressed stressed unstressed
1st person singular i mi mia (mir) ma
2nd person singular informal du di dia (dir) da
formal Sie Eahna Eahna
3rd person singular m er a eahm 'n eahm 'n
n es, des 's des 's
f se, de 's se 's ihr
1st person plural mia (mir) ma uns uns
2nd person plural , ihr enk, eich enk, eich
3rd person plural se 's eahna eahna

Breton

edit

Contraction

edit

er

  1. contraction of e +‎ ur, literally in a(n)
  2. contraction of e +‎ ar, literally in the

Cimbrian

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle High German ër, from Old High German ër, from Proto-West Germanic *iʀ (he, it), from Proto-Germanic *iz (he, she, it, they). Cognate with German er.

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. (Luserna) he, it

Inflection

edit
Personal pronouns (Luserna)
singular plural
1st person i biar
2nd person du iar
3rd person er, si, 'z se

References

edit

Cornish

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *per- (in front). See Welsh er.

Pronunciation

edit

Preposition

edit

er

  1. for, by, on account of
Derived terms
edit

Etymology 2

edit

From Old Cornish er, from Proto-Celtic *eriros (eagle) (compare Breton erer, Welsh eryr, Old Irish irar), from Proto-Indo-European *h₃érō (large bird).

 
er (an eagle)

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er m (plural eryon or eres)

  1. eagle
Alternative forms
edit

Etymology 3

edit

From Middle Cornish er, borrowed from Middle English eir, from Anglo-Norman heir, from Latin hērēs.

Noun

edit

er m (plural erys)

  1. heir

Etymology 4

edit

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “related to arlais? not in GM”)

Noun

edit

er m (dual dewer, plural eryow)

  1. (anatomy) temple

Etymology 5

edit

From Proto-Celtic *sagro-. Cognate with Welsh haer.

Noun

edit

er m

  1. challenge, defiance, stubbornness, insistence, heresy

Etymology 6

edit

See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

Noun

edit

er

  1. soft mutation of ger

References

edit
  • er” in Cornish Dictionary / Gerlyver Kernewek, Akademi Kernewek.

Crimean Tatar

edit

Adjective

edit

er

  1. every

Czech

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er n (indeclinable)

  1. The name of the Latin script letter R/r.

Further reading

edit

Danish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Old Danish ær, Proto-Germanic *izum, *izud, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁es- (to be). The infinitive of the verb (være) is from a different PIE root; the present tense is suppletive.

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /ɛr/, [ɛɐ̯], [ɛɒ̯̽], but often elided in spontaneous speech.

Verb

edit

er

  1. present of være

Dutch

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Weak form of der, the unstressed form of daar ("there")

Adverb

edit

er

  1. there (can refer to any place, used when not emphasizing the distance to the speaker, see usage notes)
  2. (dummy pronoun) there (used in more constructions than in English, often not translated)
    Er is een communicatiefout opgetreden.
    A communication error has occurred.
    Wat is er gebeurd?
    What happened?
    • 2025 December 15, u/InEenEmmer, r/katten[3] (Reddit post):
      Er is een kat bij mij in de buurt die elke dag naar de supermarkt gaat om wat aandacht en lekkers te krijgen van de klanten.
      There is a cat in my area that goes to the supermarket every day to get some attention and treats from the customers.
      (Can we archive this URL?)
    • 2026 April 15, u/Own_Sandwich6610, r/thenetherlands[4] (Reddit post):
      Gisteren die arme man in brand, nu dit. Er wordt elkaar zulke nare dingen aan gedaan, ik word er echt heel verdrietig van. Levens worden gewoon verwoest. Vreselijk
      Yesterday that poor man on fire, now this. People are doing such horrible things to each other (literally: "Such horrible things are being done to each other"), it really makes me very sad. Lives are just being destroyed. Terrible.
      (Can we archive this URL?)
  3. pronominal adverb form of het: it; him, her, them
    Ik heb ermee gewerkt.
    I have worked with it/them.
    Je kunt er de bergen boven zien.
    You can see the mountains above it/them.
Usage notes
edit
Descendants
edit
  • Petjo: d'r

Etymology 2

edit

From Old Dutch iro, genitive of the personal pronoun (3rd person plural).

Adverb

edit

er

  1. (partitive pronoun) of them, of those (often not translated in English)
    Mijn broer heeft drie kinderen en ik heb er twee.
    My brother has three children and I have two. (literally: two of those)
    Ik zie er geen meer.
    I don't see any more (of them).
Synonyms
edit
Derived terms
edit

See Category:Dutch pronominal adverbs

edit
See also
edit

Anagrams

edit

Faroese

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

er

  1. third-person singular indicative present of vera
    Hann er skipari.
    He is a captain/skipper.
    Hon er úr Føroyum.
    She is from the Faroe Islands.
    Tað er í ordan.
    It's all right.

Gagauz

edit
 
Er
Cyrillic ер

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish یر (yẹr), Proto-Turkic *yẹr. Compare Turkish and Azerbaijani yer.

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit

er (definite accusative eri, plural erlär)

  1. the ground
    erä düşmääto fall to the ground
    erdän bulduunu idihe ate what he took from the ground
  2. soil, country, land
    Gagauz EriGagauz Land
  3. earth
  4. (astronomy, sometimes capitalized) the Earth
    Synonyms: toprak, dünnää
  5. place, location
  6. (politics) rank, statue
Declension
edit
Declension of er
singular (tekil) plural (çoğul)
nominative (yalın) er erlär
definite accusative (belirtme) eri erleri
dative (yönelme) erä erlerä
locative (bulunma) erdä erlerdä
ablative (çıkma) erdän erlerdän
genitive (tamlayan) erin erlerin
Derived terms
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Inherited from Old Anatolian Turkish ایر (eyer), from Proto-Turkic *ēder. Compare Turkish eyer.

Alternative forms

edit

Noun

edit

er (definite accusative eri, plural erlär)

  1. saddle
    Synonym: semer
Declension
edit
Declension of er
singular (tekil) plural (çoğul)
nominative (yalın) er erlär
definite accusative (belirtme) eri erleri
dative (yönelme) erä erlerä
locative (bulunma) erdä erlerdä
ablative (çıkma) erdän erlerdän
genitive (tamlayan) erin erlerin
Derived terms
edit

Further reading

edit
  • Baboglu, N. İ.; Baboglu, İ. İ. (1993), “ер”, in Gagauzça-Rusça hem Rusça Gagauzça Şkola Sözlüü [Gagauz-Russian and Russian-Gagauz School Dictionary], Chișinău: Vivat, →ISBN, page 31
  • Mavrodi M. F., editor (2019), “er”, in Gagauzça-rusça sözlük: klaslar 1-4, Komrat: Gagauziya M.V. Maruneviç adına Bilim-Aaraştırma merkezi, →ISBN, page 31
  • Kopuşçu M. İ., Todorova S. A., Kiräkova T.İ., editors (2019), “er”, in Gagauzça-rusça sözlük: klaslar 5-12, Komrat: Gagauziya M.V. Maruneviç adına Bilim-Aaraştırma merkezi, →ISBN, page 62
  • Çebotar, Petri; Dron, Ion (2002), “er”, in Gagauzça-Rusça-Romınca Sözlük [Gagauz-Russian-Romanian Dictionary], Chișinău: Pontos Press, →ISBN, page 238
  • N. A Baskakov, editor (1972), “ер”, in Gagauzsko-Russko-Moldavskij Slovarʹ [Gagauz-Russian-Moldovan Dictionary], Moskva: Izdatelʹstvo Sovetskaja Enciklopedija, →ISBN, page 178

German

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle High German ër, from Old High German ër, from Proto-West Germanic *iʀ, from Proto-Germanic *iz. In northern Middle High German and Old High German there also existed forms with initial h-, namely Middle High German hër, Old High German hër, from Proto-Germanic *hiz, whence Central Franconian and (from the accusative) Luxembourgish hien. Compare English he. The unusual spelling ih- in the forms ihm, ihn is not related to this. It was introduced in early modern German to distinguish these forms from im, in (when *iem, *ien could have been read as *jem, *jen).

Pronunciation

edit
  • (standard) IPA(key): /eːr/, [ʔeːɐ̯], [ʔɛɐ̯]
  • (colloquially in unstressed position) IPA(key): /ɐ/

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. (personal) he
    Wo ist Klaus? Wo ist er? Where is Klaus? Where is he?
    Dies ist mein Hund. Er heißt Waldi. This is my dog. His name is Waldi.
  2. (personal) it (when the grammatical gender of the object/article/thing/animal etc., being referred to, is masculine (der))
    Dort steht ein Baum. Er ist über hundert Jahre alt. There stands a tree. It is more than 100 years old.
  3. (personal) she (when the grammatical gender of the noun being referred to and designating a female person, is masculine (der))
    Im Frauengefängnis versuchte ein Häftling zu flüchten, aber er kam nicht weit. In the women’s prison, an inmate tried to escape, but she didn’t get very far.
  4. (colloquial) Used in reference to a computer or other machine when personifying it; it
    Ich habe die Route gerade ins Navi eingegeben, und jetzt sagt er, die Autobahn wäre gesperrt.
    I just put the route into the GPS, and now it says that the highway is closed.
  5. (personal, archaic) alternative spelling of Er (you (polite))

Declension

edit
  • In contemporary German, the genitive forms of personal pronouns are restricted to formal style and are infrequent even then. They may be used:
    • for the genitive object still found in a handful of verbs: Ich erbarmte mich seiner. – "I had mercy on him". (Colloquially one would either use the dative case, or a prepositional object, or replace the verb with another.)
    • with certain adjectives or prepositions that govern the genitive, such as statt ("instead of, in place of"): Ich kam statt seiner in die Mannschaft. – I joined the team in his place. (This sounds antiquated, for which reason an seiner Statt or an seiner Stelle is preferable.)
  • Older forms/spellings include:
    • jm (dative; 16th century), jn (accusative; 16th century) – distinguished from im (in the, into the) and in (in, into)
    • ihme (dative)

Derived terms

edit

Further reading

edit

Hunsrik

edit

Alternative forms

edit
  • ëyer (Wiesemann spelling system)

Etymology

edit

From Old High German er, from Proto-Germanic *iz. Displaced the northern Old High German forms with h-, e.g. , her (see he).

Pronunciation

edit

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. he

Inflection

edit
Hunsrik personal pronouns
nominative accusative dative
proclitic enclitic stressed unstressed stressed unstressed
singular 1st person ich
eich
-ich mich
meich
meer mer
m'r
2nd person
(informal)
du
dau/Dau
-du, -de
-Dau, -De
dich
deich/Deich
deer der
d'r/D'r
3rd
person
m er; där -er ihn en ihm em
f sie; die -se sie / ihns se eer
ehr
re
n es; das
et, 't
's es
et

-et, -'t
ihm em
plural 1st person meer mer uns
uhs
2nd person deer
Ehr, Dehr
der eich
Auch
3rd person sie; die -se sie se denne

Further reading

edit
  • Boll, Piter Kehoma (2021), “er”, in Dicionário Hunsriqueano Riograndense–Português, 3rd edition (overall work in Portuguese), Ivoti: Riograndenser Hunsrickisch

Iberian

edit

Etymology

edit

Might be related to Basque era (way, manner)

Noun

edit

er

  1. manner, way

References

edit
  • Villamor, Fernando (2020) A basic dictionary and grammar of the Iberian language

Icelandic

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

From Old Norse er (is, 3rd person singular), analogical leveling of earlier es, from Proto-Germanic *isti, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁ésti.

Use with the 1st person singular is also by analogy with other forms in er-; the Old Norse 1st person singular form was em.

Verb

edit

er

  1. first-person singular indicative present of vera
    Ég er skemmtilegur.
    I am fun (masculine)
    Hver er ég?
    Who am I?
  2. third-person singular indicative present of vera
    Hver er hann?
    Who is he?

Etymology 2

edit

From Old Norse er, from Proto-Germanic *iz (he), from Proto-Indo-European *ís (he, that).

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. (relative) which
    Maður er , er Jón heitir.
    There is a man who is named John.
    Konan, er hann vartala við.
    The woman to whom he was talking.
    Þetta er borgin, er hann kom frá.
    This is the city from which he originated.
    Bærinn, er hún ætlar til.
    The town to which she's heading.
  2. (archaic) in relations with a demonstrative pronoun (this, that, these) or personal pronoun (I, we, they), which represents the genitive of a relative pronoun
    Það er bók, er menn þekkja eigi höfund hennar.
    There is a book whose author people don't know.

Conjunction

edit

er

  1. (with an "indexical"; ábendingarorð) of a place, of a time
    • Judges 2:19
      En er dómarinn andaðist, breyttu þeir að nýju verr en feður þeirra, með því að elta aðra guði til þess að þjóna þeim og falla fram fyrir þeim. Þeir létu eigi af gjörðum sínum né þrjóskubreytni sinni.
      But when the judge died, the people returned to ways even more corrupt than those of their ancestors, following other gods and serving and worshiping them. They refused to give up their evil practices and stubborn ways.
    Þar er ég kom.
    There whence I came.
    Þá er myndin var búin.
    When the movie was finished.
Derived terms
edit

References

edit
  • Zoëga, Geir T. (1910), “er”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at the Internet Archive

Indonesian

edit

Etymology

edit

From Dutch er.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

èr (plural er-er)

  1. The name of the Latin script letter R/r.

Synonyms

edit
  • ar (Standard Malay)

See also

edit

Further reading

edit

Italian

edit

Article

edit

er m sg

  1. (Romanesco, Tuscan) dialectal form of el, whence modern il

Usage notes

edit
  • In modern times, the initial e- survives mostly only when the article precedes a word beginning with r- (or more rarely even when the previous word ends in a consonant), such as in e’ resto (the change) where a hypothetical **rresto (change) would be unacceptable because of its homophony with resto since geminated r’s don't exist in Roman; this is also reflected in the writing where the e- is omitted, as in rcane (the dog) If preceding a word starting with l-, the form el—either due to assimilation or lack of rhotacism and subsequent retention of the original-l—might still be used; indeed, forms such as "el letto" and "el lavoro" are rather more common than their rhotacized counterparts.

Jamtish

edit

Verb

edit

er

  1. present indicative of vara

Japanese

edit
Japanese Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ja

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From English -er, forming novel pseudo-Anglicisms.

Pronunciation

edit

Suffix

edit

er(アー) (

  1. (slang) Suffix used for people, especially fans.

Derived terms

edit
edit

Further reading

edit
  • 難波功士 [Koji Nanba] (2006), “〈研究ノート〉“-er”の系譜:サブカルチュラル・アイデンティティの現在 [The History of Neology Using the Suffix ‘-er’ in Japanese: In terms of sub-cultural identities of youths]”, in 関西学院大学社会学部紀要[7], number 100, pages 181–189

Kembra

edit

Noun

edit

er

  1. water

Latin

edit

Alternative forms

edit
  • *hēr (unattested, but likely, as aspiration is attested in derived forms such as hērīcius and hērīnāceus, while the base form is attested only a couple of times)

Etymology 1

edit

From Proto-Italic *hēr, from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰḗr (hedgehog) (whence also Ancient Greek χήρ (khḗr, hedgehog)), a root noun from *ǵʰer- (to be excited, be bristly), whence also Ancient Greek χοῖρος (khoîros, young pig) and Albanian derr (pig) from *ǵʰór-yos.[1]

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

ēr m (genitive ēris); third declension

  1. hedgehog
Usage notes
edit

There is some uncertainty as to the exact forms of this word, especially regarding whether the lemma form of this was ēr or ēris, as the forms attested in literature could point to either option. Another form, irim (acc. sing.; found in Plautus, Capt. 184), seems to be a spelling variant.

Declension
edit

Third-declension noun.

edit

Etymology 2

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er f (indeclinable)

  1. The name of the letter R.
Usage notes
edit
  • Multiple Latin names for the letter R, r have been suggested. The most common is er or a syllabic r, although there is some evidence which also supports, as names for the letter, , rrr, ər, , and even (in the fourth- or fifth-century first Antinoë papyrus, which gives Greek transliterations of the Latin names of the Roman alphabet’s letters) ιρρε (irrhe).
Coordinate terms
edit
Descendants
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “ēr”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 193

Further reading

edit
  • ēr”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • ēr”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
  • Arthur E. Gordon, The Letter Names of the Latin Alphabet (University of California Press, 1973; volume 9 of University of California Publications: Classical Studies), especially pages 30–31, 42–44, and 63

Latvian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er m (invariable)

  1. The Latvian name of the Latin script letter R/r.

See also

edit

Low German

edit

Pronoun

edit

er

  1. alternative spelling of ehr

Lower Sorbian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

er m inan

  1. The name of the Latin script letter r/R.

See also

edit

Malay

edit

Etymology

edit

Possibly borrowed from English er or is a pronunciation spelling of a in non-rhotic Malay accents.

Pronunciation

edit

Interjection

edit

er

  1. Used to express hesitation; er, uh.
    Synonym: a
    Er, kita tengah ke mana ni?
    Er, where are we going?

Mambae

edit

Noun

edit

er

  1. water

References

edit
  • Mambai Language Manual: Ainaro Dialect (2001)

Mandarin

edit

Romanization

edit

er

  1. nonstandard spelling of ēr
  2. nonstandard spelling of ér
  3. nonstandard spelling of ěr
  4. nonstandard spelling of èr

Usage notes

edit
  • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

Manx

edit

Etymology

edit

    From a conflation of three Old Irish prepositions:

    1. ar, air (for) (triggering lenition), from Proto-Celtic *ɸare (in front of), from Proto-Indo-European *pr̥h₂i. Cognates include Ancient Greek παρά (pará, beside) and English fore.
    2. for (on) (triggering no mutation), from Proto-Celtic *uɸer (over, on) (compare Welsh ar, Breton war), from Proto-Indo-European *upér (compare Latin super, Ancient Greek ὑπέρ (hupér), Old English ofer).
    3. íar (after) (triggering eclipsis), from Proto-Celtic *eɸirom (after, behind), from Proto-Indo-European *h₁epi.

    Cognates include Irish ar and Scottish Gaelic air.

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Preposition

    edit

    er

    1. on

    Inflection

    edit
    Inflection of er
    Person: simple emphatic
    singular first orrym orrym's
    second ort ort's
    third m er ersyn
    f urree urreeish
    plural first orrin orrinyn
    second erriu erriuish
    third orroo orroosyn

    Pronoun

    edit

    er

    1. third-person singular of er
      on him/it

    Derived terms

    edit

    Middle Dutch

    edit

    Adverb

    edit

    er

    1. unstressed form of dāer

    Middle English

    edit

    Etymology 1

    edit

      From Old English ǣr, from Proto-West Germanic *airi, from Proto-Germanic *airi.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Adverb

      edit

      er

      1. early
      2. earlier
      3. formerly
      4. rather
      Derived terms
      edit
      Descendants
      edit
      References
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit
      PIE root
      *h₂eḱ-

        Inherited from Old English ēar, æhher, from Proto-West Germanic *ahaʀ, from Proto-Germanic *ahaz, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éḱos.

        The form ner displays reanalysis of the /n/ of the article an as belonging to the noun.

        Alternative forms

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        er (plural eres)

        1. ear (fruiting body of a grain plant)
        2. (rare) A cluster of fruit.
        Descendants
        edit
        References
        edit

        Etymology 3

        edit

        Determiner

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of hire (her, genitive)

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of hire (hers)

        Etymology 4

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of hire (her, object)

        Etymology 5

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of eere (ear of grain)

        Etymology 6

        edit

        Determiner

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of here (their)

        Middle High German

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        Inherited from Old High German er, from Proto-Germanic *iz (he).

        Pronunciation

        edit
        • IPA(key): (before 13th CE) /ˈɛr/

        Pronoun

        edit

        ër

        1. (personal) he

        Inflection

        edit
        Middle High German personal pronouns
        nominative genitive dative accusative
        singular first person ich mīn mir mich
        second person du, dīn dir dich
        third
        person
        m ër
        CG hë(r)
        sīn im(e) in
        f siu ir(e) ir(e) sie
        n ëȥ
        CG , it
        es im(e) ëȥ
        CG , it
        plural first person wir unser uns uns, unsich
        second person ir iuwer iu, iuch iuch
        third
        person
        m sie ir(e) in sie
        f
        n siu siu
        The distinction of the forms siu and sie as shown above is typical of earlier Upper German texts, but was never general. The forms and si existed additionally and all four were increasingly used without differentiation.

        Descendants

        edit
        • Alemannic German:
          Low Alemannic:
          Alsatian: ar, er, ër
          Badisch: er
          High Alemannic: er, är
          Bernese: är
          Lucerne: aer
          Northeastern: ar
          Walser: är
        • Swabian: er, ear
          Swabian Jura: ear
        • Bavarian: er
        • Central Franconian:
          Moselle Franconian: er
          • Hunsrik: er, ëyer (Wiesemann spelling system)
        • East Central German:
          High Prussian: er
          Silesian East Central German:
          Lower Silesian East Central German: a
          Upper Silesian East Central German: a
          North Moravian: ar
          Thuringian: er
          Central Thuringian: er
          West Thuringian: aa
          Upper Saxon German: är
          Meißnisch: är
          Osterländisch: är
          Erzgebirgisch: aorr
          Lusatian: ar
        • German: er
          Berlinerisch: er/ea
        • East Franconian: er, ea
          Unterfränkisch: ar
          Hohenlohisch: er
        • Rhine Franconian:
          Upper Hessian: er
          Lorraine Franconian: ér, éa
          Palatine German: er
          • Pennsylvania German: er
        • Yiddish: ער (er)

        References

        edit
        • Benecke, Georg Friedrich; Müller, Wilhelm; Zarncke, Friedrich (1863), “ër”, in Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch: mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Benecke, Stuttgart: S. Hirzel

        Mòcheno

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        From Middle High German ër, from Old High German ër, from Proto-West Germanic *iʀ (he, it), from Proto-Germanic *iz (he, she, it, they). Cognate with German er.

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. he, it

        Inflection

        edit

        References

        edit

        Norwegian Bokmål

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Verb

        edit

        er

        1. present of være (to be)
          Han er ikke hjemme.He is not home.

        Norwegian Nynorsk

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Verb

        edit

        er

        1. is, are, am (present of to be) present of vera
          Eg er framand.I am a stranger.
        2. (auxiliary) be
          Boka er skriven.The book is written
          Bøkene er skrivne.The books are written.

        References

        edit
        • “vera” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
        • er på engelsk”, in DinOrdbok, Nynorsk-engelsk oversettelse, 15 October 2018 (last accessed)

        Old Dutch

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        From Proto-West Germanic *airi, from Proto-Germanic *airiz.

        Preposition

        edit

        ēr

        1. before, earlier than

        Descendants

        edit

        Further reading

        edit
        • ēr (II)”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012

        Conjunction

        edit

        ēr

        1. ere, afore

        Descendants

        edit

        Further reading

        edit
        • ēr (III)”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012

        Adverb

        edit

        ēr

        1. previously, in an earlier period, in a bygone time
        2. earlier, before a certain time or period

        Descendants

        edit

        Further reading

        edit
        • ēr (I)”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012

        Old Frisian

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From Proto-West Germanic *airi, from Proto-Germanic *airiz. Cognates include Old English ǣr, Old Saxon ēr and Old Dutch ēr.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Adverb

        edit

        ēr

        1. earlier, previously

        Preposition

        edit

        ēr (+ dative)

        1. before (of time)

        Descendants

        edit
        • Saterland Frisian: eer
        • West Frisian: ear't

        Etymology 2

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        ēr f

        1. alternative form of ēre

        References

        edit
        • Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009), An Introduction to Old Frisian: History, Grammar, Reader, Glossary, Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, →ISBN

        Old High German

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From Proto-West Germanic *airi, from Proto-Germanic *airiz, whence also Old English ær.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Adjective

        edit

        ēr

        1. early

        Adverb

        edit

        ēr

        1. ere, before
        2. formerly

        Conjunction

        edit

        ēr

        1. before, until

        Preposition

        edit

        ēr (+ dative)

        1. before

        Etymology 2

        edit

        From Proto-Germanic *aiz, akin to Old English ār, Old Norse eir.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        ēr n

        1. ore
        2. brass
        Descendants
        edit
        • Middle High German: er
          • Alemannic German: Eer
            • Alemannic German: eerig
        • Old High German: ērīn

        Etymology 3

        edit

        From Proto-Germanic *iz (he), akin to Gothic 𐌹𐍃 (is, he), Latin is (he).

        Alternative forms

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        ër

        1. he
          • c. 830 CE, Rabanus Maurus et al., Diatessaron 13.20:
            [] Bist thu wīzago? inti hër antlingota nein []
            [] Are you prophet? and he responded no []
        Inflection
        edit
        Old High German personal pronouns
        nominative genitive dative accusative
        singular first person ih
        (ihha, ihcha)
        mīn mir mih
        second person dīn dir dih
        third
        person
        m er (her) (sīn) imu, imo inan, in
        f siu; , si ira (iru, iro) iru, iro sia
        n iz es, is imu, imo iz
        plural first person wir unsēr uns unsih
        second person1 ir iuwēr iu iuwih
        third
        person
        n sie iro im, in sie
        f sio sio
        n siu siu

        1 Also polite singular form

        Descendants
        edit
        • Middle High German: ër (see there for further descendants)

        References

        edit
        • Joseph Wright, An Old High German Primer

        Old Norse

        edit

        Alternative forms

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From earlier es, from Proto-Germanic *iz (he; 3rd person personal pronoun). Cognate with Gothic 𐌹𐍃 (is), Old High German ēr (German er).

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. who, which, that
          • verse 76 of the Hávamál (1996 translation by Carolyne Larrington)
            en orðstírr / deyr aldregi / hveim er sér góðan getr
            but the glory of reputation never dies, / for the man who can get himself a good one

        Conjunction

        edit

        er

        1. where
        2. when
          En er hann dó, grét ǫll verǫldin
          and when he died, the whole world cried.
        Descendants
        edit
        • Icelandic: er
        • Faroese: er
        • Old Swedish: ær

        Usage notes

        edit
        • The oldest Icelandic manuscripts from the 12th century still have the older form es, and many poems metrically require the contracted form -s (which is also sporadically present in later manuscripts like the late 13th century Codex Regius). In spite of this, most editors chose never to restore er to es, Finnur Jónsson and the editors of the Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages series being important exceptions.

        Etymology 2

        edit

        From earlier es, from Proto-Norse ᛁᛊᛏ (ist), from Proto-Germanic *isti, first/third-person singular indicative present of *wesaną. The final -s was replaced by -r due to analogy to the plural forms of the verb.

        Verb

        edit

        er

        1. third-person singular indicative present of vera
        Usage notes
        edit
        • See above; the same rules apply.
        Descendants
        edit
        • Icelandic: er
        • Faroese: er
        • Norwegian:
          • Norwegian Bokmål: er
          • Norwegian Nynorsk: er
        • Jamtish: er
        • Elfdalian: ir
        • Old Swedish: ær
        • Danish: er
        • Old Gutnish: ier

        Further reading

        edit
        • Zoëga, Geir T. (1910), “er”, in A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press; also available at the Internet Archive

        Old Prussian

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        From Proto-Indo-European *h₂er-/*h₂r̥-. Cognate with Lithuanian ar̃ (also, if), Latvian ar (also), Ancient Greek ἄρ (ár, hence, as well as).

        Preposition

        edit

        er + (optionally another preposition)

        1. until, to, up to

        Derived terms

        edit

        Particle

        edit

        er

        1. as well as

        See also

        edit

        References

        edit
        • Mažiulis, Vytautas (1988), “er”, in Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas [Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian]‎[8] (in Lithuanian), volume 1, Vilnius: Mokslas, pages 282-283

        Old Saxon

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From Proto-West Germanic *airi, whence also Old English ær.

        Adjective

        edit

        ēr

        1. early
        Declension
        edit
        Positive forms of ēr
        Strong declension
        singular plural
        masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
        nominative ēr ēr ēr ēre, ēra ēra ēr, ēra
        accusative ēran, ēren ēra ēr ēra, ēre ēra ēr, ēra
        genitive ēres, ēras ērara, ēraro ēres, ēras ēraro, ēroro, ērero ēraro, ēroro, ērero ēraro, ēroro, ērero
        dative ērumu, ērum, ērun, ērun, ēron, ēren, ēran ēraro, ēraru, ērara ērumu, ērum, ērun, ērun, ēron, ēren, ēran ērun, ēron, ērum ērun, ēron ērun, ēron, ērum
        Weak declension
        singular plural
        masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
        nominative ēro, ēra ēra, ēre ēra, ēre ēron, ērun ēron, ērun, ēran ēron, ērun
        accusative ēron, ēran ērun, ēron, ēran ēra, ēre ēron, ērun ēron, ērun, ēran ēron, ērun
        genitive ēren, ēran ērun, ēran, ēren ēren, ēran ērono, ēreno ērono ērono, ēreno
        dative ēron, ēren, ēran ērun, ēran ēron, ēren, ēran ēron, ērun ēron, ērun ēron, ērun

        Adverb

        edit

        ēr

        1. before, ere
        2. formerly

        Conjunction

        edit

        ēr

        1. before

        Preposition

        edit

        ēr [with dative]

        1. before

        Etymology 2

        edit

        From Proto-Germanic *aiz, whence also Old English ār.

        Noun

        edit

        ēr ?

        1. copper, bronze
        2. ore
        Descendants
        edit
        • Middle Low German: ēr

        Etymology 3

        edit

        From Proto-Germanic *airuz. Cognate with Old English ār, Old Norse árr, Gothic 𐌰𐌹𐍂𐌿𐍃 (airus).

        Noun

        edit

        ēr m

        1. messenger, herald

        Old Tupi

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        Back-formation from era (name).[1]

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Adjective

        edit

        er (IIa class pluriform, R1 rer, R2 ser, noun form era)

        1. named; having a name

        Derived terms

        edit

        References

        edit
        1. ^ Navarro, Eduardo de Almeida (2013), “era”, in Dicionário de tupi antigo: a língua indígena clássica do Brasil [Dictionary of Old Tupi: The Classical Indigenous Language of Brazil] (overall work in Portuguese), São Paulo: Global, →ISBN, page 109, column 1

        Palauan

        edit

        Preposition

        edit

        er

        1. Used to indicate a specific object noun phrase.
          el mo er a medadin the future.
          er a elecha el tutauthis morning.
          rakket er a tenistennis racket.

        References

        edit
        • er in Palauan Language Online: Palauan-English Dictionary, at tekinged.com.
        • er in Palauan-English Dictionary, at trussel2.com.
        • er in Lewis S. Josephs; Edwin G. McManus; Masa-aki Emesiochel (1977), Palauan-English Dictionary, University Press of Hawaii, →ISBN, page 88.

        Pennsylvania German

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        Compare German er.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. he

        Declension

        edit
        Pennsylvania German personal pronouns
        Number singular plural
        Person/
        Gender
        1st 2nd person 3rd person 1st 2nd 3rd
        familiar polite/formal m f n
        nominative ich du
        de1
        dihr
        der1
        Sie
        er sie
        se1
        es mir
        mer1
        dihr
        der1
        sie
        dative mir
        mer1
        dir
        der1
        eich
        Ihne
        Ne1
        ihm
        em1
        ihre
        re1
        ihm
        em1
        uns eich ihne
        ne1
        accusative mich dich eich
        Sie
        ihn
        en1
        sie
        se1
        es sie

        1 unstressed

        Polabian

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        Borrowed from Middle Low German ere / eren / here.

        Noun

        edit

        er m ?

        1. master, gentleman

        Adverb

        edit

        er

        1. alternative form of ar

        References

        edit
        • Polański, Kazimierz (1971), “er”, in Słownik etymologiczny języka Drzewian połabskich [Etymological Dictionary of the Polabian Drevani Language] (in Polish), number 2 (ďüzd – ľotü), Wrocław; Warszawa etc.: Ossolineum, page 145
        • Polański, Kazimierz; James Allen Sehnert (1967), “er”, in Polabian-English Dictionary, The Hague, Paris: Mouton & Co, page 60
        • Olesch, Reinhold (1962), “Herr”, in Thesaurus Linguae Dravaenopolabicae [Thesaurus of the Drevani language] (in German), volumes 1: A – O, Cologne, Vienna: Böhlau Verlag, →ISBN, page 237

        Polish

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        er f

        1. genitive plural of era

        Salar

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From Old Turkic erür.

        Noun

        edit

        er

        1. is, are

        Etymology 2

        edit

        From Proto-Turkic *ēr. Cognate to Azerbaijani ər, Turkish er, Turkmen är.

        Noun

        edit

        er

        1. man

        Etymology 3

        edit

        From Proto-Turkic *ẹ̄r. Cognate to Turkish er, Turkmen īr.

        Adjective

        edit

        er

        1. (Dialectal, Mengda, Ejia) early
          Synonym: erği
          Antonym: uda

        Adverb

        edit

        er

        1. morning
        2. long time ago
        Declension
        edit
        Declension of er
        singular plural
        nominative er erler
        genitive erniği erlerniği
        dative ere erlere
        definite accusative erni erlerni
        locative erde erlerde
        ablative erden erlerden
        instrumental erla erlerla
        pronominal erği erlerği
        indefinite article er-or erler-or
        definite article ercük erlercük
        Possessive declension of er
        nominative
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irim irimler
        siniği ("your") iriñ iriñler
        aniği ("their") iri iriler
        piserniği ("our") irimiz irimizler
        selerniği ("your") iriñiz iriñizler
        ularniği ("their") iri iriler
        accusative
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irimni irimlerni
        siniği ("your") iriñni iriñlerni
        aniği ("their") irini irilerni
        piserniği ("our") irimizni irimizlerni
        selerniği ("your") iriñizni iriñizlerni
        ularniği ("their") irini irilerni
        dative
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irime irimlere
        siniği ("your") iriñe iriñlere
        aniği ("their") iriğe irilere
        piserniği ("our") irimize irimizlere
        selerniği ("your") iriñize iriñizlere
        ularniği ("their") iriğe irilere
        locative
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irimde irimlerde
        siniği ("your") iriñde iriñlerde
        aniği ("their") iride irilerde
        piserniği ("our") irimizde irimizlerde
        selerniği ("your") iriñizde iriñizlerde
        ularniği ("their") iride irilerde
        ablative
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irimden irimlerden
        siniği ("your") iriñden iriñlerden
        aniği ("their") iriden irilerden
        piserniği ("our") irimizden irimizlerden
        selerniği ("your") iriñizden iriñizlerden
        ularniği ("their") iriden irilerden
        instrumental
        singular plural
        miniği ("my") irimla irimlerla
        siniği ("your") iriñla iriñlerla
        aniği ("their") irila irilerla
        piserniği ("our") irimizla irimizlerla
        selerniği ("your") iriñizla iriñizlerla
        ularniği ("their") irila irilerla
        Derived terms
        edit
        See also
        edit

        References

        edit
        • Tenishev, Edhem (1976), “eř, er”, in Stroj salárskovo jazyká [Grammar of Salar], Moscow: Nauka, page 326
        • 马伟 [Ma Wei], 朝克 [Chaoke] (2014), “er”, in 撒拉语366条会话读本 [Salar 366 Conversation Reader]‎[9], 1st edition, 社会科学文献出版社 [Social Science Literature Press], →ISBN, page 105
        • 马伟 [Ma Wei] (2016), “er, erğine”, in 濒危语言——撒拉语研究 [Endangered Languages ​​- Salar Language Studies], 青海 [Qīnghǎi, Qinghai]: 青海师范大学 [Qinghai Normal University], unpublished finalized project manuscript (国家社会科学基金项目结项稿, 定稿; National Social Science Fund of China), pages 108, 262
        • 林莲云 [Lin Lianyun] (1985), “er”, in 撒拉语简志 [A Brief History of Salar]‎[10], Beijing: 民族出版社: 琴書店, →OCLC, pages 33, 134
        • Ma, Chengjun; Han, Lianye; Ma, Weisheng (December 2010), “er”, in 米娜瓦尔·艾比布拉 [Minavar Abibra], editor, 撒维汉词典 [Sā-Wéi-Hàn cídiǎn, Salar-Uyghur-Chinese dictionary] (in Chinese), 1st edition, Beijing, →ISBN, page 103

        Saterland Frisian

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        From Old Frisian -er, from Proto-West Germanic *iʀ. Cognates include West Frisian er and German er.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. unstressed form of hie (he)

        See also

        edit
        Saterland Frisian personal pronouns
        subject case object case
        stressed unstressed
        singular 1st iek mie
        2nd du die
        3rd m hie er him
        f ju ze hier
        n dät et dät
        plural 1st wie uus
        2nd jie jou
        3rd jo ze hier

        References

        edit
        • Marron C. Fort (2015), “er”, in Saterfriesisches Wörterbuch mit einer phonologischen und grammatischen Übersicht, Buske, →ISBN

        Scots

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        Verb

        edit

        er

        1. (Southern Scots) Second-person simple present form of ti be
        2. (Southern Scots) Plural simple present form of ti be
        3. (Southern Scots) First-person singular simple present form of an obscure form of ti be
          A'm er so!
          (please add an English translation of this usage example)
        Usage notes
        edit

        Used emphatically. See ir.

        Etymology 2

        edit

        Noun

        edit

        er (plural ers)

        1. Shetland form of air (beach)

        Spanish

        edit

        Article

        edit

        er

        1. (Andalusia, Extremadura) eye dialect spelling of el
        2. (Andalusia, Extremadura) pronunciation spelling of el

        Swedish

        edit

        Etymology

        edit

        Contraction of earlier eder, from Old Swedish iþer, idher, from Old Norse iðʀ, from Proto-Germanic *izwiz, dative/accusative of *jūz, from Proto-Indo-European *yúHs.

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        er c (neuter possessive only ert, plural era)

        1. you (plural objective case)
          Synonym: (highly formal, archaic) eder
          Ni två är här, så jag ser er
          You [subject] two are here, so I see you [object]
          Det är en ära att få träffa er båda
          It is an honor to [get to] meet you both
        2. (possessive) your, yours (possessed by the multiple individuals addressed, of one common-gender thing (or possessed by the single individual addressed if used as a polite pronoun – see (sense 3)))
          Synonyms: (informal) eran, (formal, archaic) eder
          Är det här er(an) boll, pojkar?
          Is this your ball, boys? ["Eran" is common in casual speech]
          Scenen är er, pojkar!
          The stage is yours, boys! ["Eran" would be uncommon here, perhaps due to "är er" sounding more pithy]
          Tro på er själva, pojkar!
          Believe in yourselves, boys! ["Eran" is ungrammatical here]
          Är det här er boll, fröken?
          Is this your [polite] ball, Miss? [Dated – see (sense 3). "Eran" would intuitively defeat the purpose of being polite here by being slightly less proper.]
        3. you (second-person singular objective formal) (capitalized Er, rare in contemporary Swedish – see the notes at ni, which mostly also apply here)
          Jag hör er inte, kapten
          I can't hear you [polite], Captain
          Er is likely to still have been perceived as polite here, despite being used "upwards," which is a difference from ni, hence "mostly also apply." A perfectly "safe" polite phrasing would have been, "Jag hör inte kapten" (I can't hear Captain), using a title.
        4. (reflexive pronoun) reflexive of ni; compare yourselves
          Identifiera er, pojkar!
          Identify yourselves, boys!
          Ta hand om er, pojkar!
          Take care, boys!
          (literally, “Take care of yourselves, boys!”)
          Låt er inte luras, pojkar!
          Don't be fooled, boys!
          (literally, “Let yourselves not be-fooled, boys!”)
          Para ihop er två och två
          Pair up in twos
          (literally, “Pair together yourselves two and two”)
          Skulle ni vilja lära er (att) jonglera?
          Would you guys like to learn how to juggle?
          (literally, “Would you [plural] want-to learn/teach yourselves to juggle?”)
          Identifiera er, fröken!
          Identify yourself [polite], Miss! [Dated – see (sense 3)]

        Usage notes

        edit
        • See ni for a note on its use as a courteous 2nd person singular.
        • Even though er (2) and its archaic form eder is the possessive pronoun, it does have a genitive form ers and eders, which is only used in expressions like ers majestät (Your Majesty) and ers höghet (Your Highness).

        Declension

        edit
        Swedish personal pronouns
        Number Person nominative oblique possessive
        common neuter plural
        singular first jag mig, mej3 min mitt mina
        second du dig, dej3 din ditt dina
        third masculine (person) han honom, han2, en5 hans
        feminine (person) hon henne, na5 hennes
        gender-neutral (person)1 hen hen, henom7 hens
        common (noun) den den dess
        neuter (noun) det det dess
        indefinite man or en4 en ens
        reflexive sig, sej3 sin sitt sina
        plural first vi oss vår, våran2 vårt, vårat2 våra
        second ni er er, eran2, ers6 ert, erat2 era
        archaic I eder eder, eders6 edert edra
        third de, dom3 dem, dom3 deras
        reflexive sig, sej3 sin sitt sina
        1Neologism. Usage has increased since 2010, though it remains limited.
        2Informal
        4Dialectal, also used lately as an alternative to man, to avoid association to the male gender.
        5Informal, somewhat dialectal
        6Formal address
        7Discouraged by the Swedish Language Council

        See also

        edit

        References

        edit

        Anagrams

        edit

        Turkish

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        Inherited from Ottoman Turkish ایر, ار, from Old Anatolian Turkish ایر (ẹr), from Proto-Turkic *ẹ̄r (early). Related to Old Turkic 𐰼 (er).

        Adverb

        edit

        er

        1. (dialectal) early
          Synonym: erken
        2. (Afyonkarahisar) suhur
          Synonym: sahur
        Usage notes
        edit
        • Also found in widespread non-dialectal use in phrases such as er ya da geç ("sooner or later")
        Derived terms
        edit

        Etymology 2

        edit

        Inherited from Ottoman Turkish ار (er), from Old Anatolian Turkish ار (er), from Proto-Turkic *ēr (man). Compare Old Turkic 𐰼 (er), Azerbaijani ər.

        Noun

        edit

        er (definite accusative eri, plural erler)

        1. man, male
          Synonyms: adam, erkek
        2. warrior, hero, noble
          Synonyms: yiğit, batur, bahadır, kahraman
        3. conscript, private (soldier of the lowest rank of the army)
          Synonym: nefer
        4. tribesman
        5. a skilled person
        6. (now chiefly dialectal, Kars, Rize) husband
          Synonyms: koca, zevç
        7. (religion, mysticism) one who displays a lot of religious virtues, and therefore is thought to have reached God's love; saint
          Synonyms: veli, ermiş
        8. pawn
          Synonym: piyon
        Declension
        edit
        Declension of er
        singular plural
        nominative er erler
        definite accusative eri erleri
        dative ere erlere
        locative erde erlerde
        ablative erden erlerden
        genitive erin erlerin
        Possessive forms
        nominative
        singular plural
        1st singular erim erlerim
        2nd singular erin erlerin
        3rd singular eri erleri
        1st plural erimiz erlerimiz
        2nd plural eriniz erleriniz
        3rd plural erleri erleri
        definite accusative
        singular plural
        1st singular erimi erlerimi
        2nd singular erini erlerini
        3rd singular erini erlerini
        1st plural erimizi erlerimizi
        2nd plural erinizi erlerinizi
        3rd plural erlerini erlerini
        dative
        singular plural
        1st singular erime erlerime
        2nd singular erine erlerine
        3rd singular erine erlerine
        1st plural erimize erlerimize
        2nd plural erinize erlerinize
        3rd plural erlerine erlerine
        locative
        singular plural
        1st singular erimde erlerimde
        2nd singular erinde erlerinde
        3rd singular erinde erlerinde
        1st plural erimizde erlerimizde
        2nd plural erinizde erlerinizde
        3rd plural erlerinde erlerinde
        ablative
        singular plural
        1st singular erimden erlerimden
        2nd singular erinden erlerinden
        3rd singular erinden erlerinden
        1st plural erimizden erlerimizden
        2nd plural erinizden erlerinizden
        3rd plural erlerinden erlerinden
        genitive
        singular plural
        1st singular erimin erlerimin
        2nd singular erinin erlerinin
        3rd singular erinin erlerinin
        1st plural erimizin erlerimizin
        2nd plural erinizin erlerinizin
        3rd plural erlerinin erlerinin
        Predicative forms
        singular plural
        1st singular erim erlerim
        2nd singular ersin erlersin
        3rd singular er
        erdir
        erler
        erlerdir
        1st plural eriz erleriz
        2nd plural ersiniz erlersiniz
        3rd plural erler erlerdir
        Derived terms
        edit
        edit

        Etymology 3

        edit

        Verb

        edit

        er

        1. second-person singular imperative of ermek

        Further reading

        edit
        • er”, in Turkish dictionaries, Türk Dil Kurumu
        • er”, in Türkiye'de halk ağzından derleme sözlüğü [Compilation Dictionary of Popular Speech in Turkey] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu, 1963–1982
        • Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–), “er”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
        • Ayverdi, İlhan (2010), “er”, in Misalli Büyük Türkçe Sözlük, a reviewed and expanded single-volume edition, Istanbul: Kubbealtı Neşriyatı
        • XIII. Yüzyılından Beri Türkiye Türkçesiyle Yazılmış Kitaplarından Toplanan Tanıklarıyle Tarama Sözlüğü (Türk Dil Kurumu yayınları; 212)‎[11] (in Turkish), Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu, 1963–1977
        • Çağbayır, Yaşar (2007), “er”, in Ötüken Türkçe Sözlük (in Turkish), Istanbul: Ötüken Neşriyat, pages 1458-1459

        Uzbek

        edit
        Other scripts
        Arabic Afghan Uzbek اېر (er)
        Yangi Imlo
        Cyrillic эр
        Latin er

        Etymology

        edit

        Inherited from Proto-Turkic *ēr.

        Noun

        edit

        er (plural erlar)

        1. man
          Synonym: erkak
        2. husband
          Synonym: zavj
          Antonym: xotin

        Derived terms

        edit

        Welsh

        edit

        Pronunciation

        edit

        Etymology 1

        edit

        From Middle Welsh yr, from Proto-Brythonic *er, from Proto-Celtic *ɸeri, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *per- (in front). Compare Cornish er (for, by), Ancient Greek περί (perí, about, peri-), Latin per (through).[1]

        Conjunction

        edit

        er

        1. although
          • 2018 September 28, “Cymraeg y Wladfa a Chymraeg Cymru - beth yw'r gwahaniaethau?”, in BBC Cymru Fyw:
            Nid y Sbaeneg (er y byddai hynny'n syniad da hefyd) ond Cymraeg arbennig y Wladfa.
            Not Spanish (although that would also be a good idea) but the particular Welsh of Y Wladfa.
          • 2019 June 13, Llinos Lee, “Y Barri: Mwy na dim ond 'Gavin & Stacey'”, in BBC Cymru Fyw:
            Ges i fy magu yn Y Barri, ac er mod i wedi symud i ffwrdd i'r brifysgol, …
            I was brought up in Barry, and although I moved away for university, …

        Preposition

        edit

        er (triggers soft mutation)

        1. (literary) since
          Synonym: ers
        2. (archaic) in spite of, despite
          Synonym: er gwaethaf
        3. (archaic) in order to
          Synonyms: er mwyn, i
        4. (archaic) for the sake of
          Synonym: er mwyn
        5. (obsolete) because of
          Synonyms: achos, o achos, oherwydd, oblegid
        6. (obsolete) for, in exchange for
          Synonym: am
        7. (obsolete) resulting in
        8. (obsolete) through
          Synonyms: trwy, drwy

        Usage notes

        edit
        • In very formal or literary language, er is used when a specific start time is mentioned.
        Saif y castell yma er 1284.
        The castle has stood here since 1284.
        Y mae’r castell yn adfail er pan fu farw’r brenin olaf.
        The castle has been a ruin since the last king died.
        Ers is used when the beginning of the time period is not mentioned.
        Mae’r castell yma ers canrifoedd.
        The castle has been here for centuries.
        In less formal registers, ers is used in all instances.

        Inflection

        edit
        Personal forms (literary)
        singular plural
        first person erof erom
        second person erot eroch
        third person erddo m
        erddi f
        erddynt

        Derived terms

        edit

        Etymology 2

        edit

        See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

        Noun

        edit

        er f (plural eriau)

        1. The name of the Latin script letter R/r.

        See also

        edit

        Mutation

        edit
        Mutated forms of er
        radical soft nasal h-prothesis
        er unchanged unchanged her

        Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
        All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

        References

        edit
        1. ^ R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke, et al., editors (1950–present), “er”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

        West Frisian

        edit

        Pronoun

        edit

        er

        1. clitic form of hy used before the object or after the verb.