kjerr
Norwegian Bokmål
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /çɛr/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ɛr
- Hyphenation: kjerr
Etymology 1
From Old Norse kjarr (“copsewood, brushwood, thicket”), from Proto-Germanic *kerzą, *kerzuz (“scrub, bushes”), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵers- (“to turn, bend, twist”).
Noun
kjerr n (definite singular kjerret, indefinite plural kjerr, definite plural kjerra or kjerrene)
- (chiefly dialectal) a small bog or swamp; marsh (an area of low, wet land, often with tall grass)
- a small scrub, especially with willows or alder on marshy ground
- 1858, Nicolai Ramm Østgaard, Fra Skov og Fjeld, page 119:
- [hesten ville idelig] gjøre afstikkere ind mellem kjærrene for at afrive sig en mundfuld løv
- [the horse would constantly] make detours in between the scrubs to tear off a mouthful of foliage
- 1907, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnsons fortællinger, page 29:
- jeg ledte i hvert kjær
- I searched in every scrub
- 1989, Herbjørg Wassmo, Dinas bok, page 52:
- [bringebærene] blir plukket i kjerret bak stabburet
- [the raspberries] are picked in the scrub behind the storage house
Alternative forms
Derived terms
- bjørkekjerr
- multekjerr
- vierkjerr
Etymology 2
Alternative or dialectal form of kjer (“a fishing device”), from Old Norse ker (“tub, vessel, goblet”), from Proto-Germanic *kazą (“vessel, vat, tub, barrel”), from *kas- (“to throw, toss, raise, bring up”), of unknown origin. Doublet of kar.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /çɛrː/
Noun
kjerr n (definite singular kjerret, indefinite plural kjerr, definite plural kjerra)
- thicket
- 1971, Olav H. Hauge, Tid å hausta inn:
- […] og svarte klasar av bjønnebær skin i kjerri, […]
- […] and black bunches of blackberries glimmer in the thickets, […]
References
- “kjerr” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
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