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Webster 1913 Edition
Boer
Definition 2024
Boer
Boer
English
Noun
Boer (plural Boers)
- A Dutch colonist in South Africa, or one of their (white) descendants, especially a farmer; an Afrikaner.
- 1979, André Brink, A Dry White Season, Vintage 1998, p. 93:
- ‘I won't say good day to a **** boer!’ he exploded, swinging round viciously to escape into the angry light outside.
- 1979, André Brink, A Dry White Season, Vintage 1998, p. 93:
- A militant in the Boer War
See also
Translations
Anagrams
boer
boer
Afrikaans
Noun
boer (plural boere, diminutive boertjie)
Synonyms
- (chess piece): pion
Verb
boer (present boer, present participle boerende, past participle geboer)
- to farm
- to continuously encounter someone at a specific place
- Hy boer daar by haar huis.
- He is always there at her house.
- Hy boer daar by haar huis.
- to stay; to sojourn; to linger
- Hy't die heel middag by daardie meisie geboer.
- He stayed over at that girl['s place] the whole afternoon.
- Moenie op 'n vraag boer nie.
- Don't linger on a question.
- Hy't die heel middag by daardie meisie geboer.
Danish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /boːər/, [ˈb̥oːˀɐ]
Etymology 1
See bo (“estate, nest”).
Noun
boer n
- plural indefinite of bo
Etymology 2
Noun
boer c (singular definite boeren, plural indefinite boere)
Inflection
External links
- boer on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbuːr/
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch bure, from Proto-Germanic *būraz (“dweller, inhabitant”), thus originally the same as modern buur (“neighbour”). The form boer is that of many eastern dialects including Limburgish, where Germanic -ū- has been retained as a back vowel. In early modern Dutch these two dialectal forms were adopted as semantically distinguished words. Cognate to Old English būr, ġebūr (whence English bower) and Old High German būr (whence German Bauer).
Noun
boer m (plural boeren, diminutive boertje n, feminine boerin)
- (male) farmer, peasant
- -boer (in compounds) merchant (and sometimes producer) of a certain product group, mainly foods, often named after it, e.g. melkboer 'milkman', groenteboer '(male) greengrocer'
- A boor, yokel, ruffian
- A jack (playing card)
Synonyms
- (farmer): landbouwer, teler, tuinder, veehouder
Derived terms
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Etymology 2
Originally onomatopoetic, as is English burp. The perception of farmers (etymology 1) as being mannerless people has probably played a secondary role, too. The same in German Bäuerchen.
Noun
boer m (plural boeren, diminutive boertje n)
- A burp
Derived terms
Verb
boer