different between saury vs saur

saury

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s??.?i/

Etymology

From Latin saurus, from Ancient Greek ?????? (saûros, lizard)

Noun

saury (plural sauries)

  1. A marine epipelagic fish of the family Scomberesocidae, with beaklike jaws and a row of small finlets behind the dorsal and anal fins.

Derived terms

  • Atlantic saury (Scomberesox saurus, Scomberesox scombroides, Scomberesox simulans)
  • blotched saury (Saurida nebulosa) (Australia)
  • clouded saury (Saurida nebulosa) (Australia)
  • common suary (Saurida tumbil) (Australia)
  • dwarf saury (Scomberesox simulans) (Africa, UK)
  • filamentous saury (Saurida filamentosa) (Australia)
  • gracile saury (Saurida gracilis) (Australia)
  • grey saury (Saurida undosquamis) (Australia)
  • large-scaled saury (Saurida undosquamis) (Australia)
  • longfin saury (Saurida longimanus) (Australia)
  • orangemouth saury (Saurida flamma)
  • Pacific saury (Cololabis saira. Scomberesox scombroides)
  • painted saury (Synodus myops) (Australia)
  • shortfin saury (Saurida argentea, Saurida micropectoralis) (Australia)
  • shortjaw saury (Saurida isarankurai)
  • silver saury (Saurida tumbil) (Australia)
  • slender saury (Saurida gracilis, Saurida elongata) (Australia)
  • South Pacific saury (Scomberesox scombroides)
  • threadfin saury (Suarida filamentosa) (Australia)
  • Wanieso saury (Saurida wanieso) (Australia)

Translations

References

  • saury in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • saury on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Surya, S?rya

saury From the web:

  • saury meaning
  • what is saury fish
  • what does saury taste like
  • what is saury in tagalog
  • what does saury mean
  • saury definition


saur

English

Etymology

Contracted from Irish salachar (filth, nastiness), from salach (nasty), from sal (filth, refuse). (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)

Noun

saur

  1. (Britain, dialect) soil; dirt
  2. (Britain, dialect) dirty water
  3. (Britain, dialect) urine from a cowhouse

Anagrams

  • Ruas, Sura, URAs, USAR, USRA, sura

Dalmatian

Alternative forms

  • seraur

Etymology

From Latin soror, with the variant form seraur deriving from the Latin accusative form sor?rem. Compare Romanian sor?, suror?, sor, Italian suora, Old Italian suoro, French soeur, Old Spanish seror, Spanish sor, Friulian sûr, Romansch sora, sour.

Noun

saur f

  1. sister

French

Etymology

From Middle French saur, from Old French sor, from Frankish *s?ri, *saur (dry), from Proto-Germanic *sauzaz (dry, parched). Cognate with Old English s?ar (dry). More at sear.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /s??/

Adjective

saur (feminine singular saure, masculine plural saurs, feminine plural saures)

  1. (cooking) dried and smoked

Derived terms

  • hareng saur (kipper)

Further reading

  • “saur” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Gothic

Romanization

saur

  1. Romanization of ????????????????

Icelandic

Etymology

From Old Norse saurr, from Proto-Germanic *sauraz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /søy?r/
  • Rhymes: -øy?r

Noun

saur m (genitive singular saurs, no plural)

  1. filth, dirt
  2. feces

Declension

Synonyms

  • (dirt): óhreinindi, saurindi, skítur
  • (feces): skítur (vulgar), kúkur (informal)

Derived terms

  • saurblað
  • saurindi
  • saurlifnaður
  • saurlífi
  • saurugur

Related terms

  • seyra
  • sori

Westrobothnian

Etymology

From Old Norse saurr.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [s?????], [s????e??], [s??????], [s??u???], [s??u???]
    Rhymes: -?????r

Noun

saur m

  1. mote, speck, particle, dust
    Ji a fått’n saur (or söur) ti öjgä
    I have received a mote in the eye.
    Han gav mäg int’n saur’n gång
    He gave me not the slightest mote.

Alternative forms

  • söur
  • sor
  • s?ger
  • såger

Related terms

  • s?ra
  • söri

References

  • Rietz, Johan Ernst, “SAUR”, in Svenskt dialektlexikon: ordbok öfver svenska allmogespråket [Swedish dialectal lexicon: a dictionary for the Swedish lects] (in Swedish), 1962 edition, Lund: C. W. K. Gleerups Förlag, published 1862–1867, page 559

saur From the web:

  • what sauron looks like
  • what sauropods lived with trex
  • what sauropods lived in the cretaceous period
  • what sauropod has the longest neck
  • what sauron say to aragorn
  • what sauron says to galadriel
  • what sauropods lived in the late cretaceous period
  • what sauropods lived in the jurassic period
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