eyer

See also: Eyer and eþer

English

Etymology

eye + -er

Noun

eyer (plural eyers)

  1. One who eyes someone or something.
    • 1654, Edmund Gayton, Pleasant Notes upon Don Quixot, London, Notes vpon Book II. Chap. IV, p. 47,
      The Amoretto was wont to take his stand at one place about the pew, where sate his Mistresse, who was a very attentive hearer of the man above her, and the sutor was as diligent an eyer of her, for having a book, and black-lead pen alwaies in his hand, (as if he took notes of the sermon) at last he got her exact picture.
    • 2010, Robert Coover, Noir, New York: Overlook Duckworth, p. 97,
      You knew less about sex than you knew about sleuthing, but you soon figured out what the goods were and got them. You were not so much a private eye as an eyer of privates.

Anagrams


Middle English

Noun

eyer (plural eyeres)

  1. Alternative form of eyrer (female swan)

Adverb

eyer

  1. Alternative form of er (early)

Noun

eyer (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of air (air)

Noun

eyer (plural eyeres)

  1. Alternative form of heir (heir)

Noun

eyer

  1. Alternative form of eyre

Turkish

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish اكر, اكیر, ایر (eyer), from Proto-Turkic *ēder.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /e.ˈjæɾ/
  • Hyphenation: e‧yer

Noun

eyer (definite accusative eyeri, plural eyerler)

  1. saddle (seat on an animal)

Derived terms

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