[go: nahoru, domu]

See also: Warr

English

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Noun

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warr (plural warrs)

  1. Obsolete form of war.
    • 1641, Joseph Hall, The Works of the Lord, in Judgment and Mercy (sermon)
      [] one of the most rich, and flourishing countreys[sic] of the Christian world [] now wasted with the miseries of a long and cruell warr, wallowing in blood, buried in rubbidge and dust []

Anagrams

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Alemannic German

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Etymology

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From Middle High German wār, from Old High German hwār, wār, from Proto-Germanic *hwar (where, to which place). Cognate with German wo, Dutch waar, English where, Icelandic hvar.

Adverb

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warr

  1. (Uri) whither, where (to which place)

References

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Middle English

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Adjective

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warr

  1. Alternative form of werre (worse)

Adverb

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warr

  1. Alternative form of werre (worse)

Noun

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warr

  1. Alternative form of werre (worse)

Vilamovian

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warr

Etymology

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From Early New High German werr f.

Noun

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warr f (plural warra)

  1. mole cricket, any of various large insects from the family Gryllotalpidae that burrow into moist soil and feed on plant roots.