scheuern

(Angielski)

  1. (transitive, weak) to scrub, scour (wash by rubbing with force)
  2. (intransitive, transitive, weak) to chafe, fret (to wear or hurt by rubbing)
  3. (reflexive, transitive, weak) to rub (oneself or a body part) on something
  4. (colloquial, weak) to slap

Częstotliwość

40k
Dialekty

Bazylea-Okręg

Bazylea-Okręg

fääge

Bazylea-Okręg

Bazylea-Okręg

figge

Bazylea-Okręg

Bazylea-Okręg

ripse

Dane dostarczone przez: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Wymawiane jako (IPA)
/ˈʃɔʏ̯əʁn/
Etymologia (Angielski)

In summary

An originally Central and Low German word, from northern Middle High German schiuren and Middle Low German schǖren (both 14th c.). Further origin uncertain, but probably from Old French escurer (“to clean off”), from Late Latin excurare (literally “to treat thoroughly”), from Latin ex- + curare. If so, borrowed through Middle Dutch schuren (13th c., modern schuren), otherwise cognate with it. See English scour for more.

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