spar

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See also: SPAR, spař, spár, spär, and spår

English

Pronunciation

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  • Audio (UK):(file)
  • Lua error in Module:parameters at line 360: Parameter 1 should be a valid language or etymology language code; the value "US" is not valid. See WT:LOL and WT:LOL/E. IPA(key): /spɑɹ/, [spɑɹ], [spɑ˞]
  • Rhymes: -ɑː(ɹ)
  • Homophone: spa (in non-rhotic accents)

Etymology 1

From Middle English sparre (spar, rafter, beam) (noun), sparren (to close, bar) (verb), from Middle Dutch sparre or Middle Low German Sparre, all ultimately from Proto-Germanic *sparrô (stake, beam), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)par- (beam, log).

Compare Dutch spar (balk), German Sparren (rafter, spar), Danish sparre (spar), Albanian shparr, shpardh (kind of oak). Perhaps also compare spear.

Noun

spar (plural spars)

  1. A rafter of a roof.
  2. A thick pole or piece of wood.
  3. (obsolete) A bar of wood used to fasten a door.
  4. (nautical) Any linear object used as a mast, sprit, yard, boom, pole or gaff.
  5. (aeronautics) A beam-like structural member that supports ribs in an aircraft wing or other airfoil.
Derived terms
Translations

Template:ttbc-top

Verb

spar (third-person singular simple present spars, present participle sparring, simple past and past participle sparred)

  1. (obsolete or dialectal) To bolt, bar.
    • c. 1503–1512, John Skelton, Ware the Hauke; republished in John Scattergood, editor, John Skelton: The Complete English Poems, 1983, →OCLC, page 64, lines 91–94:
      The church dores were sparred,
      Fast boltyd and barryd,
      Yet wyth a prety gyn
      I fortuned to come in, []
  2. (transitive) To supply or equip (a vessel) with spars.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Middle English sparren (to dart out; to strike out), from Old English sperran, spirran, spyrran (to strike, strike out at, spar), related to Low German sparre (a struggling, striving), German sich sperren (to struggle, resist, oppose), Icelandic sperrast (to kick out at, thrust, struggle).

Verb

spar (third-person singular simple present spars, present participle sparring, simple past and past participle sparred)

  1. To fight, especially as practice for martial arts or hand-to-hand combat.
    • 2012 April 15, Phil McNulty, “Tottenham 1-5 Chelsea”, in BBC[1]:
      After early sparring, Spurs started to take control as the interval approached and twice came close to taking the lead. Terry blocked Rafael van der Vaart's header on the line and the same player saw his cross strike the post after Adebayor was unable to apply a touch.
  2. To strike with the feet or spurs, as cocks do.
  3. To contest in words; to wrangle.
Translations

Noun

spar (plural spars)

  1. A sparring session; a preliminary fight, as in boxing or cock-fighting.

Etymology 3

From Middle Low German spar, sper (spar); or from a backformation of sparstone (spar), from Middle English sparston (gypsum, chalk), from Old English spærstān (gypsum). Related to German Sparkalk (plaster), Old English spæren (of plaster, of mortar).

Noun

spar (countable and uncountable, plural spars)

  1. (mineralogy) Any of various microcrystalline minerals, of light, translucent, or transparent appearance, which are easily cleft.
  2. (mineralogy) Any crystal with readily discernible faces.
Descendants
  • Irish: sparra
  • Welsh: sbar
Translations

Anagrams


Danish

Etymology 1

From Spanish espada (sword), from Latin spatha, from Ancient Greek σπάθη (spáthē, blade).

Noun

spar c (singular definite sparen, plural indefinite sparer)

  1. spade (one of the black suits in a deck of cards)
Inflection

Etymology 2

See spare (to save,spare).

Verb

spar

  1. (deprecated template usage) imperative of spare

See also

Suits in Danish · farver, kulører (layout · text)
hjerter ruder spar klør

Dutch

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From Middle Dutch sparre (pole, beam), from Old Dutch *sparro, from Frankish *sparro, from Proto-Germanic *sparrô. Cognate to West Frisian spjir.

Noun

spar m (plural sparren, diminutive sparretje n)

  1. spruce; certain tree of the family Pinaceae, especially of the genus Picea, but also used for trees of the genera Abies, Tsuga and Pseudotsuga.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Verb

spar

  1. (deprecated template usage) first-person singular present indicative of sparren
  2. (deprecated template usage) imperative of sparren

German

Pronunciation

Verb

spar

  1. singular imperative of sparen
  2. (colloquial) first-person singular present of sparen

Icelandic

Etymology

Related to the verb spara (to save)

Adjective

spar (comparative sparari, superlative sparastur)

  1. economical
  2. thrifty

Declension


Middle English

Verb

spar

  1. Alternative form of sparren (to close)

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology 1

From German [Term?], from Spanish espadas (sword).

Noun

spar

  1. spades (suit in playing cards)

Etymology 2

Verb

spar

  1. imperative of spare

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

From German [Term?], from Spanish espadas (sword).

Noun

spar m (definite singular sparen, indefinite plural spar or sparar, definite plural sparane)

  1. spades (suit in playing cards)

Etymology 2

Verb

spar

  1. present of spa
  2. imperative of spara

References


Swedish

Verb

spar

  1. (deprecated template usage) present tense of spara.
  2. (deprecated template usage) imperative of spara.

Anagrams