See also: Thur and Thür

English edit

Adverb edit

thur (not comparable)

  1. Pronunciation spelling of there.
    • 2007 November 11, Virginia Heffernan, “High-Def at High Noon”, in New York Times[1]:
      “Thur’s a lot of Indians down thur, Captain Scull,” one says.

Pronoun edit

thur

  1. Pronunciation spelling of there.
    • 1898, Richard Jefferies, The Toilers of the Field[2]:
      "I'd 'ave sooner had 'un of anybody else," said he, "but thur war nur anuther to be had, and it bean't such a bad 'un nither, only Measter Humphreys be hardish in the mouth."
    • 1905, Joseph Hocking, Roger Trewinion[3]:
      Any-rate, thur wur lots of talk, fur 'twas seed not only in the church, and churchyard, but up at the house."

Anagrams edit

Albanian edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Albanian *tsurja, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱr̥H-, zero-grade of *ḱer- (to tie, plait) (compare Ancient Greek καῖρος (kaîros, row of thrums on the loom), Armenian սարդ (sard, spider)).

Verb edit

thur (aorist thura, participle thurur)

  1. to plait, braid, interweave
  2. to knit
  3. to fence in, enclose

Related terms edit

Irish edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

thur

  1. Lenited form of tur.