Uhr
Central Franconian
Etymology 1
From Old High German ōra.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /uə̯/
Noun
Uhr n (plural Uhre, diminutive Ührche)
- (Ripuarian, northern Moselle Franconian) ear
- Wann de schlääch hürs, wäsch der de Föß, datt der Dreck us de Uhre nohrötsch.
- Wash your feet if you can’t hear well, so that the dirt from your ears can slide down.
Alternative forms
- Ohr (southern Moselle Franconian)
Etymology 2
From Middle Dutch ūre.
Pronunciation
Noun
Uhr f (plural Uhre, diminutive Ührche)
Alternative forms
- Ouher (Moselle Franconian)
German
Alternative forms
- h (common abbreviation)
Etymology
From late Middle High German ūre, from Middle Low German ûre (“hour”), from Middle Dutch ure, from Old Dutch *ūra, from Latin hōra, from Ancient Greek ὥρα (hṓra), from Proto-Indo-European *yeh₁- (“year, season”). The word was borrowed in the late 14th century when the diphthongization of -ū- into -ou-, -au- was already complete in most dialects; a shifted form exists, however, in dialects (compare Luxembourgish Auer). In German, the word early on developed the sense “timing device”, not present in other languages. Compare further Dutch uur, English hour, French heure.
Pronunciation
Noun
Uhr f (genitive Uhr, plural Uhren)
- (invariable) hour as a unit of clock time; o'clock
- Es ist vier Uhr.
- It is four o'clock.
- Es ist vier Uhr zwölf.
- It is twelve minutes past four.
- Wieviel Uhr ist es?
- What time is it?
- clock, watch (timing device)
- Meine Uhr geht nach.
- My watch is running slow.
- (in compounds) meter (a kind of measuring instrument, typically for water and gas consumption)
- Wasseruhr ― water meter
- Gasuhr ― gas meter
Declension
Derived terms
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Further reading
- Uhr in Duden online
German Low German
Noun
Uhr n (plural has not been set)
- Alternative spelling of Ur
Pennsylvania German
Etymology
Noun
Uhr f (plural Uhre)