See also: urword

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From ur- (original, primal) +‎ word. Compare Dutch oerwoord, German Urwort.

Noun

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ur-word (plural ur-words)

  1. An original or primal word; a protoword.
    • 1997, Fritz Buri, The Buddha-Christ As the Lord of the True Self:
      As "neither linguistically conceived experience nor speech-less experience," but rather as "the experience of the removal of the word" and in unity with the experience of the birth of the word," the "Ur-word" would correspond accordingly to the "Ur-sentence", [...]
    • 2004, John Powell Ward, The Spell of the Song:
      According to Hillis Miller, Hopkins supposed that, by a continuous process of subdivision, all words descend from a first original, an ur-word.
    • 2006, Gail Stenstad, Transformations:
      Enowning, enabling saying (showing), makes way in clearing and opening ways for gathering-thinging. Heidegger in another work calls on an Ur-word from the East, bringing it into play with the thought of enowning.
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