different between byre vs ayre

byre

English

Etymology

From Middle English bire, bier, byr, from Old English b?re.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ba??(?)/
  • Rhymes: -a??(?)

Noun

byre (plural byres)

  1. (chiefly Britain) A barn, especially one used for keeping cattle in.
    • 1935, T.S. Eliot, Murder in the Cathedral, Part II:
      It was here in the kitchen, in the passage,
      In the mews in the harn in the byre in the market-place [...]
    • 1999, Neil Gaiman, Stardust, page 9 (2001 Perennial Edition):
      The visitors came up the narrow road through the forest from the south; they filled the spare-rooms, they bunked out in cow byres and barns.

Translations

Anagrams

  • Brey, Byer, Erby, yerb

Old English

Etymology 1

From Proto-Germanic *buriz (son).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?by.re/

Noun

byre m (nominative plural byras or byre)

  1. child, son, descendant; young man, youth

Etymology 2

From Proto-Germanic *buriz (hill, elevation).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?by.re/

Noun

byre m (nominative plural byras or byre)

  1. mound

Etymology 3

From Proto-Germanic *buriz (favourable wind).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?by.re/

Noun

byre m (nominative plural byras or byre)

  1. strong wind, storm
Descendants
  • Middle English: bir
    • English: birr

Etymology 4

From Proto-Germanic *burjaz (opportunity), related to Old English byrian (to come up, occur).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?by.re/

Noun

byre m (nominative plural byras or byre)

  1. time, opportunity; occurrence
Derived terms
  • ambyre (favorable, fair)

Etymology 5

Probably related to Old English b?r. Perhaps identical to the word for a farm or dwelling in German -büren, Dutch -buren.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?by?.re/

Noun

b?re n (nominative plural b?ru)

  1. stall, shed, hut
Derived terms
  • c?b?re m (cow-byre, cow-shed)
Descendants
  • English: byre

Scots

Etymology

From Old English b?re, but possibly influenced in usage by Gaelic "bò" meaning a cow.

Noun

byre (plural byres)

  1. A cattle shed or outhouse
Derived terms
  • Byreman, cattleherd
  • Byregraip, a dung fork.

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ayre

English

Etymology 1

From an unattested Norn word, from Old Norse eyrr. Compare Icelandic eyri, Norwegian øyr.

Noun

ayre (plural ayres)

  1. A narrow bar of sand or gravel formed by the sea; a sandbank.

Etymology 2

Noun

ayre (plural ayres)

  1. Archaic spelling of air.
    • 1856, Notes and Queries, page 425
      It is precisely to this—not destruction, but dissolution—(for dissolve is the poet's word) this melting into thin ayre, of the world itself, that Tooke maintains the word rack, i. e. reek, to be most- appropriate. And I think he was right in so doing.

Anagrams

  • Arey, Ayer, Raye, Reay, Yare, aery, eyra, y'are, yare, year

Ladino

Etymology

From Old Spanish ayre, from Latin ?er, from Ancient Greek ??? (a?r).

Noun

ayre m (Latin spelling)

  1. wind

Old Spanish

Etymology

From Latin ?er, from Ancient Greek ??? (a?r).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?aj.?e]

Noun

ayre m (plural ayres)

  1. air
    • c. 1250, Alfonso X, Lapidario, f.

Descendants

  • Ladino: ayre
  • Spanish: aire

ayre From the web:

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  • what ayren mean
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