See also: Over, Över, over, over-, över, över-, and øver

Dutch

edit
Dutch Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nl

Etymology

edit

From Middle Dutch oever, from Old Dutch *uovar, from Proto-Germanic *ōferaz. Cognate with German Ufer.

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /ˈuvər/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: oe‧ver
  • Rhymes: -uvər

Noun

edit

oever m (plural oevers, diminutive oevertje n)

  1. bank (as in riverbank), shore (e.g. of a lake)
    • 2005, “Aan de oevers van de tijd”, in Dagen van gras, dagen van stro, performed by Spinvis:
      aan de oevers van de tijd / keek ik om me heen / ik wachtte aan de kant / aan de oevers van de tijd / en alles ging voorbij / verloor zijn naam / en spoelde aan
      at the shores of time / I looked around me / I waited on the side / at the shores of time / and all went past / lost its name / and drifted ashore

Coordinate terms

edit

Derived terms

edit

Descendants

edit
  • Afrikaans: oewer

Anagrams

edit

Middle Dutch

edit

Etymology

edit

From Old Dutch *uovar, from Proto-Germanic *ōferaz.

Noun

edit

oever m or n

  1. bank, shore, waterside

Inflection

edit
Strong masculine noun
singular plural
nominative oever oevere
accusative oever oevere
genitive oevers oevere
dative oevere oeveren
Strong neuter noun
singular plural
nominative oever oever, oevere
accusative oever oever, oevere
genitive oevers oevere
dative oevere oeveren

Descendants

edit

Further reading

edit