English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Scots cloor, from Norwegian klore (to scratch with the fingers, scrawl), from Old Norse klóra (to scrawl, scratch), klór (a scratching), a frequentative verb derived from Old Norse kló (claw). Cognate with Icelandic klóra (to scratch), Faroese klóra (to scratch, tear, claw).

Verb edit

cloor (third-person singular simple present cloors, present participle clooring, simple past and past participle cloored)

  1. (transitive, dialectal) To claw, scratch.
  2. (reflexive, dialectal) To scratch (oneself).

Noun edit

cloor (plural cloors)

  1. (dialectal) A scratch, especially from a claw, nail, pin, etc.