adar - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

adar first-singular present indicative (past participle adãratã)

  1. to do; to create
  2. to build, form
  3. to decorate, ornament, embellish, adorn
  4. to fix, mend, repair
  5. to arrange

adar handiak dituen ahuntza
(a goat with big horns)

olibondo adarra
(an olive branch)

Unknown. Often explained as a Celtic borrowing. Compare Old Irish adarc (“horn”); see there for more.[1]

adar inan

  1. horn
  2. branch

Declension of adar (inanimate, ending in -r)

  1. ^ adar” in Etymological Dictionary of Basque by R. L. Trask, sussex.ac.uk

adar m (plural adares)

  1. (Judaism) Adar (sixth Jewish month)

adar

  1. on time

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

adar (Tifinagh spelling ⴰⴷⴰⵔ)

  1. (intransitive) to kneel down, to bend down, to lean down
  2. (intransitive, construed with ak) to beat with

This verb needs an inflection-table template.

adar

From Old Welsh atar, from Proto-Celtic *ɸatar, from Proto-Indo-European *péth₂r̥ (obl. *pth₂-éns), from the same root as Proto-Celtic *ɸetnos, hence Welsh edn, adain, ehedeg and Old Irish én "bird". Also compare Old Irish ette "feather", English feather, and Latin penna.

adar m (collective, singulative aderyn or deryn)

  1. birds
    Synonyms: ednod, ehediaid
  2. (obsolete) young birds, chicks
    Synonyms: adar bach, cywion