Irish

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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paor m (genitive singular paor or paoir)

  1. laughing stock, butt (_target of ridicule)
  2. grudge [with ar ‘against’]

Declension

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As fourth-declension noun:

Declension of paor (fourth declension, no plural)
bare forms
case singular
nominative paor
vocative a phaor
genitive paor
dative paor
forms with the definite article
case singular
nominative an paor
genitive an phaor
dative leis an bpaor
don phaor

As first-declension noun:

Declension of paor (first declension, no plural)
bare forms
case singular
nominative paor
vocative a phaoir
genitive paoir
dative paor
forms with the definite article
case singular
nominative an paor
genitive an phaoir
dative leis an bpaor
don phaor

References

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  1. ^ Sjoestedt, M. L. (1931) Phonétique d’un parler irlandais de Kerry [Phonetics of an Irish Dialect of Kerry] (in French), Paris: Librairie Ernest Leroux, page 28

Further reading

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Old French

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Noun

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paor oblique singularf (oblique plural paors, nominative singular paor, nominative plural paors)

  1. Alternative form of peor

Old Occitan

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Etymology

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From Latin pavor, pavōrem.

Noun

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paor f (oblique plural paors, nominative singular paor, nominative plural paors)

  1. fear

Descendants

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  • Occitan: paur

References

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Serbo-Croatian

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Etymology

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From German Bauer.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /pâor/
  • Hyphenation: pa‧or

Noun

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pȁor m (Cyrillic spelling па̏ор)

  1. (regional) peasant, farmer
    Synonym: sèljāk
  2. (regional, derogatory) hillbilly
    Synonym: seljàčina

Declension

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References

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  • paor”, in Hrvatski jezični portal [Croatian language portal] (in Serbo-Croatian), 2006–2024
  NODES
Note 1