Define:Poor
Appearance
Scots
[edit soorce]Verb
[edit soorce]- (transitive) Tae cause tae flowe in a stream, as a liquid or onything flowin lik a liquid, either oot o a veshel or intae it.
Noon
[edit soorce]- (colloquial) A stream, or something lik a stream; especially a fluid o precipitation.
Inglis
[edit soorce]Etymology
[edit soorce]Frae Middle Inglis povre, povere, frae Auld French (an Anglo-Norman) povre, poure (Modren French pauvre), frae Laitin pauper (Inglis pauper), frae Old Latin *pavo-pars (literally “getting little”), frae Proto-Indo-European *ph₁w- (“smawness”). Cognate wi Old English fēawa (“little, few”). Displaced native Middle Inglis earm, arm (“poor”) (frae Old English earm; See arm), Middle Inglis wantsum, wantsome (“puir, needy”) (frae Auld Norse vant (“deficiency, lack, want”), Middle Inglis unlede (“puir”) (frae Old English unlǣde, Middle Inglis unweli, unwely (“puir, unwalthy”) (frae Old English un- + weliġ (“well-tae-dae, prosperous, rich”).
Pronunciation
[edit soorce]- (Australie) /poː/
- (Received Pronunciation)
- /pʊə(ɹ)/
Audio (RP): [pɵː] (help·info)
- (US)
- /pʊɹ/
Audio (US) (help·info)
- (deprecatit uise o,
|lang=parameter) Rhymes: -ʊə(ɹ)(deprecatit uise o|lang=parameter) Rhymes: -ɔː(ɹ) - Template:Homophones (wi the pour-poor merger)
- Template:Homophones (in some non-rhotic accents) (wi the pour-poor merger)
Adjective
[edit soorce]Poor (comparative Poorer, superlative Poorest)
- puir in quality or walth
Limburgish
[edit soorce]Etymology
[edit soorce]Noun
[edit soorce]Poor m