Inver-
English edit
Etymology edit
From Scottish Gaelic inbhir (“river mouth, confluence”), from Old Irish *in(d)ber, from Proto-Celtic *endo-ber-o (“carrying in”), from *endo (“in”), from Proto-Indo-European *en-do-, from *h₁én. Analagous to Welsh aber (“river mouth, confluence”), from Old Welsh oper, aper, from Proto-Brythonic.
Prefix edit
Inver-
- mouth of a river; confluence
Derived terms edit
References edit
- “inver”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.