Luxembourgish edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German nāchbūre, syncopic form of nāchgebūre, from Old High German nāhgibūro, from Proto-Germanic *nēhwagabūrô. Cognate with German Nachbar, Dutch nabuur, English neighbour. The devoicing of the labial was likely caused by the preceding voiceless -ch- in Middle High German. Alternatively it may be simply because postvocalic -b- is very rare in Luxembourgish.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈnoːper/, [ˈnoː.pɐ]

Noun edit

Noper m (plural Noperen, feminine Nopesch)

  1. neighbour