. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
you have here. The definition of the word
will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
A tall glass of German beer.
Etymology 1
From Middle English bere , from Old English bēor ( “ beer ” ) (Oxford OED notes: "rare, except in poetry "), from Proto-West Germanic *beuʀ , from Proto-Germanic *beuzą ( “ beer ” ) (putatively from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeusóm), meaning “brewer's yeast”.
However, also see the "beer" entry on EtymOnline (q.v. ), which links a connection to monastic Vulgar Latin *biber ( “ a drink, beverage ” ) , from Latin bibere ( “ to drink ” ) . Samuel Johnson in his famous 18th-century A Dictionary of the English Language guessed it was from (unattested) Welsh *bîr ; he distinguished it in his time from ale — the ancient usual word — by beer being older-aged and/or smaller.
Cognate with Saterland Frisian Bjoor , West Frisian bier , German Low German Beer , Dutch bier , German Bier , Icelandic bjór ( “ beer ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
beer (countable and uncountable , plural beers )
( uncountable ) An alcoholic drink fermented from starch material, commonly barley malt ; often with hops or some other substance (like gruit ) to impart a bitter flavor.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:beer
Beer is brewed all over the world.
1921 , Ben Travers , chapter 1, in A Cuckoo in the Nest , Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company , published 1925 , →OCLC :“ [ …] the awfully hearty sort of Christmas cards that people do send to other people that they don't know at all well. You know. The kind that have mottoes like Here's rattling good luck and roaring good cheer, / With lashings of food and great hogsheads of beer . [ …] ”
( uncountable ) A fermented extract of the roots and other parts of various plants, as spruce , ginger , sassafras , etc.
( uncountable ) A solution produced by steeping plant materials in water or another fluid .
( countable ) A glass, bottle, or can of any of the above beverages.
I bought a few beers from the shop for the party.
Can I buy you a beer ?
I'd like two beers and a glass of white wine.
( countable ) A variety of the above beverages.
Pilsner is one of the most commonly served beers in Europe.
I haven't tried this beer before.
Derived terms
English terms starting with “beer”
Descendants
Translations
alcoholic drink made of malt
Abkhaz: ауараш ( awaraŝ )
Afrikaans: bier (af)
Akkadian: 𒁉 m ( šikarum )
Albanian: birrë (sq)
Amharic: ቢራ m ( bira )
Apache:
Western Apache: bíí , bíyah łitsogi
Arabic: بِيرَة f ( bīra ) , جِعَة f ( jiʕa ) , مِزْر m ( mizr )
Egyptian Arabic: بيرة f ( bīra )
Juba Arabic: meriisa , bira
Aramaic:
Classical Syriac: ܦܙܐ m ( pezzā )
Armenian: գարեջուր (hy) ( gareǰur )
Assamese: মদ ( mod )
Asturian: cerveza f
Avar: пиво ( piwo )
Azerbaijani:
Abjad: آرپه صويی ( ārpeh-sūyi /arpa suyu/ )
Roman: pivə (az) , arpa suyu ( literally “ barley water ” )
Bashkir: һыра ( hıra )
Basque: garagardo (eu)
Bats: ჲეგ ( yeg )
Belarusian: пі́ва n ( píva )
Belizean Creole: byaa
Bengali: বিয়ার (bn) ( biẏar )
Bouyei: pifjiuj
Breton: bier (br) m
Bulgarian: би́ра (bg) f ( bíra ) , пи́во (bg) n ( pívo )
Burmese: ဗျစ် (my) ( byac ) , ဘီယာ (my) ( bhiya )
Catalan: cervesa (ca) f , birra (ca) f (dialect of Maó)
Chechen: йий ( jii ) , пива ( piva )
Cherokee: ᎤᏬᎩᎵ ( uwogili )
Chichewa: mowa
Chinese:
Cantonese: 啤酒 ( be1 zau2 )
Dungan: пиҗю ( piži͡u ) , пиво ( pivo )
Eastern Min: 啤酒 ( bì-ciū )
Hakka: 麥酒 / 麦酒 ( ma̍k-chiú ) , 啤露 ( pi-lú )
Hokkien: 麥仔酒 / 麦仔酒 (zh-min-nan) ( be̍h-á-chiú, bē-á-chiú ) , 米仔酒 ( bí-á-chiú ) , 啤酒 (zh-min-nan) ( pî-chiú ) , bì-lù ( Taiwan ) , bih-luh ( Taiwan ) , bì-luh (zh-min-nan) ( Taiwan )
Jin: 啤酒 ( pi1 jiou2 )
Mandarin: 啤酒 (zh) ( píjiǔ ) , 麥酒 / 麦酒 (zh) ( màijiǔ ) ( rare or regional )
Wu: 啤酒 ( 6 bi-cieu)
Chuvash: сӑра ( săra )
Coptic: ϩⲛⲕⲉ ( hnke ) , ϩⲉⲙⲕⲓ ( hemki ) , ⲥⲕⲟⲣⲕⲉⲣ ( skorker )
Cornish: korev m
Corsican: biera (co) f , birra (co) f
Crimean Tatar: bira
Czech: pivo (cs) n
Danish: øl (da) c
Dutch: bier (nl) n
Egyptian: (ḥnqt m ), (tnmw m )
Elfdalian: öl n
Esperanto: biero (eo)
Estonian: õlu (et) , kesvamärjuke
Faroese: øl n , bjór (fo) n
Finnish: olut (fi) , kalja (fi) , sahti (fi) , mallasjuoma (fi)
French: bière (fr) f
Middle French: biere f
Old French: biere f
Friulian: bire f
Gagauz: arpa suyu
Galician: cervexa (gl) f , birra (gl) f
Georgian: ლუდი (ka) ( ludi )
German: Bier (de) n
Alemannic German: Bier n
Bavarian: bia
Greek: μπίρα (el) f ( bíra ) , ζύθος (el) m ( zýthos )
Ancient: ζῦθος m or n ( zûthos ) , ( made from barley ) βρῦτος m ( brûtos )
Greenlandic: immiaq , baaja
Haitian Creole: byè
Hausa: giyā̀ f
Hawaiian: pia , bia
Hebrew: בִּירָה (he) f ( bíra )
Hindi: बियर (hi) m ( biyar ) , यवसुरा ( yavsurā ) , बीयर m ( bīyar ) , शराब (hi) m ( śarāb ) , मद्य (hi) m ( madya ) , मदिरा (hi) f ( madirā )
Hungarian: sör (hu)
Icelandic: bjór (is) m , öl (is) n
Ido: biro (io)
Indonesian: bir (id)
Ingush: йий ( jii )
Interlingua: bira
Irish: beoir (ga) f , leann m
Middle Irish: beóir f
Old Irish: linn n , cuirm n
Italian: birra (it) f
Japanese: ビール (ja) ( bīru ) , 麦酒 (ja) ( ばくしゅ, bakushu ) ( dated or rare )
Kabyle: tabyirt f
Kalmyk: буз ( buz )
Kannada: ಬಿಯರ್ (kn) ( biyar ) , ಸಾರಾಯಿ (kn) ( sārāyi )
Kazakh: сыра (kk) ( syra )
Khmer: ប៊ីយេរ (km) ( biiyɛɛ ) , បៀរ (km) ( biə ) , ប៊ីយែរ ( biiyɛɛ ) , ឡាប់យេរ (km) ( lapyei ) , ឡាប់យ៉េរ ( lapyee ) , ឡាប៊ីយែរ ( laabiiyɛɛ )
Komi-Zyrian: сур ( sur )
Korean: 맥주(麥酒) (ko) ( maekju ) , 비어 (ko) ( bieo ) ( rare or in compounds ) , 삐보 ( ppibo ) ( dated or rare )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: بیرە ( bîre )
Northern Kurdish: bîre (ku)
Kyrgyz: пиво (ky) ( pivo ) , быйба (ky) ( bıyba ) , сыра (ky) ( sıra )
Ladino: bira f
Lao: ເບຍ (lo) ( bīa )
Latgalian: ols
Latin: cervēsa f , zȳthum (la) n , birra n
Latvian: alus (lv) m
Lezgi: пиво ( pivo )
Ligurian: bïra f
Lithuanian: alus (lt) m
Livonian: vȯl
Lombard: bira f
Low German: Beer (nds) n
Luxembourgish: Béier (lb) n
Macedonian: пиво (mk) n ( pivo )
Malay: bir (ms)
Malayalam: ബിയർ (ml) ( biyaṟ ) , യവമദ്യം ( yavamadyaṁ ) , ബിയര് ( biyarŭ )
Maltese: birra f
Manchu: ᡦᡳ ᠵᡳᠣ ( pi jio )
Mansi:
Northern Mansi: са̄ра ( sāra ) , сурыӈ тэ̄п ( suryň tè̄p ) , сур ( sur )
Manx: jough cheyl m , lhune
Maori: pia
Maranao: sirbisa
Mari:
Eastern Mari: пура ( pura ) , сыра n ( syra )
Western Mari: сыра ( syra )
Mòcheno: piar n
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: шар айраг ( šar ajrag ) ( officially preferred ) , пиво ( pivo ) ( popular )
Mongolian: ᠰᠢᠷᠠ ᠠᠶᠢᠷᠠᠭ ( sir-a ayirag ) , ᠫᠢᠸᠣ᠋ ( piwo )
Nauruan: ekaburoro (na)
Navajo: bizhééʼ hólóní
Norman: biéthe f
Northern Altai: пиво ( pivo )
Northern Sami: vuolla
Northern Thai: ᨷ᩠ᨿ , ᨷ᩠ᨿᩮ , ᨷ᩠ᨿᩮᩁ᩺ , ᨷ᩠ᨿᩁ᩺
Norwegian:
Bokmål: øl (no) n
Nynorsk: øl n
Occitan: bièrra (oc) f , cervesa (oc) f
Odia: ବିଅର୍ (or) ( biar ) , ବିଅର ( biara )
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: пиво n ( pivo )
Glagolitic: ⱂⰻⰲⱁ n ( pivo )
Old English: ealu n , bēor n ( mostly poetic )
Old French: biere f
Old Norse: bjórr m , ǫl n
Old Prussian: alu
Oromo: biiraa
Ossetian: ӕлутон ( æluton )
Pashto: بير (ps) m ( bir )
Persian: آبْجُو (fa) ( âbjow )
Plautdietsch: Bea m
Polabian: paivü n
Polish: piwo (pl) n
Portuguese: cerveja (pt) f
Punjabi: ਬੀਅਰ ( bīara )
Quechua: sirwisa
Romani: byárya f
Romanian: bere (ro) f
Romansch: biera f , gervosa f
Russian: пи́во (ru) n ( pívo )
Sami:
Kildin Sami: пӣва ( pīva )
Sanskrit: यवसुरा (sa) f ( yavasurā )
Saterland Frisian: Bjoor n
Scottish Gaelic: leann m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: пи̑во n
Roman: pȋvo (sh) n
Sicilian: birra (scn) f
Sindhi: آبجو ( âb-e jav )
Sinhalese: බීර ( bīra ) , බියර ( biyara )
Slovak: pivo (sk) n
Slovene: pivo (sl) n , ol m ( archaic )
Somali: biire
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: piwo n
Upper Sorbian: piwo n
Sotho: jwala (st)
Southern Altai: пиво ( pivo ) , сыра ( sïra )
Spanish: cerveza (es) f , birra (es) f , birria (es) f , sersia f ( Honduras )
Sranan Tongo: biri
Sudovian: pīvas m
Swahili: bia (sw) , pombe (sw)
Swedish: öl (sv) n
Tagalog: serbesa (tl)
Tajik: оби ҷав (tg) ( ob-i jav ) , пиво (tg) ( pivo )
Tamil: தோப்பி (ta) ( tōppi )
Tatar: сыра (tt) ( sıra )
Telugu: బీరు (te) ( bīru )
Tetum: serveja
Thai: เบียร์ (th) ( biia )
Tibetan: སྦི་རག ( sbi rag ) , ཆང ( chang )
Tigrinya: ቢራ ( bira )
Tok Pisin: bia
Tswana: bojalwa class 14
Turkish: bira (tr)
Turkmen: piwo
Udmurt: сур ( sur )
Ukrainian: пи́во (uk) n ( pývo )
Urdu: بِیئَر m ( bīar ) , شَراب (ur) f ( śarāb )
Uyghur: پىۋا ( piwa )
Uzbek: pivo (uz)
Vietnamese: bia (vi)
Vilamovian: biyr
Volapük: bir (vo) , ( older term, obsolete ) bil (vo) , ( barley ) hodabir , ( wheat ) vuitabir
Võro: oluq
Walloon: bire (wa)
Welsh: cwrw m , tablen (cy) f
West Frisian: bier (fy)
Yakut: пиибэ ( piibe )
Yiddish: ביר (yi) n ( bir )
Yoruba: bíà
Yucatec Maya: cheba , kʼaaj jaʼ , seerbéesa
Zhuang: laeujbizciuj
Zulu: ubhiya (zu) class 1a /2a
solution produced by steeping plant materials
glass of beer
Albanian: birrë (sq)
American Sign Language: B@Cheek Circles
Catalan: cervesa (ca) f
Czech: pivo (cs) n
Danish: øl (da) c
Dutch: biertje (nl) n
Estonian: õlu (et)
Faroese: øl f
Finnish: olut (fi) , tuoppi (fi) , oluttuoppi (fi) , tuopillinen (fi)
French: bière (fr) f , demi (fr) m
Georgian: ლუდის ჭურჭელი ( ludis č̣urč̣eli )
German: Bier (de) n
Greek: μπίρα (el) f ( bíra ) , μπύρα (el) f ( býra )
Hebrew: בִּירָה (he) f ( bíra )
Icelandic: bjór (is) n , öl (is) n , ölkrús f , bjórkrús f
Italian: birra (it) f , boccale (it) m
Japanese: ビール 一杯 ( びーるいっぱい, bīru ippai )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: بیرە ( bîre )
Norwegian:
Bokmål: øl (no) m
Nynorsk: øl m or f
Portuguese: cerveja (pt) f
Romanian: bere (ro) f
Scottish Gaelic: leann m
Slovak: pivo (sk) n
Slovene: pivo (sl) n
Spanish: cerveza (es) f , caña (es) f ( Spain )
Swahili: pombe (sw)
Swedish: öl (sv) c
Ukrainian: пи́во (uk) n ( pývo )
Vietnamese: li bia , cốc bia
Welsh: cwrw f
variety of these beverages
Translations to be checked
Verb
beer (third-person singular simple present beers , present participle beering , simple past and past participle beered )
( informal , transitive ) To give beer to (someone).
1870 , Sidney Daryl, His First Brief. A Comedietta in Clement Scott, Drawing-room Plays and Parlour Pantomimes , Robson and Sons, pages 303–304 :
No doubt he then can feed us, wine us, beer us, And cook us something that can warm and cheer us.
2010 , Steve Brezenhoff, The Absolute Value of -1 , Carolrhoda Lab, page 121 :“Beer me!” said Goody. “Also your weed is shit. Where’s the good stuff, dude?”
2013 , Janet E. Cameron, Cinnamon Toast and the End of the World , Hatchette Books Ireland, page 124 :I heard Patty Marsh yelling, ‘Beer him, Eleanor!’
2013 , R. D. Power, Forbidden , page 39 :“Beer me!” To his astonishment she obeyed his command, appearing a minute later with a glass of beer and a wry smile.
( informal , intransitive ) To drink beer .
2008 , Charles Foran, Join the Revolution, Comrade: Journeys and Essays , page 83 :In Japan, students on a Friday night announce “Let's beer !”
Etymology 2
From Middle English beere , equivalent to be + -er .
Pronunciation
Noun
beer (plural beers )
( nonstandard ) One who is or exists .
1990 , Budge Wilson , “Be-ers and Doers”, in The leaving, and other stories :That meant, among other things, that he was going to be a fast-moving doer. And even when he was three or four, it wasn't hard for me to know that this wasn't going to be easy. Because Albert was a beer . Born that way.
Further reading
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Dutch beer , from Proto-Germanic *berô .
Noun
beer (plural bere , diminutive beertjie )
bear
Etymology 2
From Dutch beer , from Proto-West Germanic *bair .
Noun
beer (plural bere )
boar ( male swine )
Dutch
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch bēre , from Old Dutch *bero , from Proto-West Germanic *berō , from Proto-Germanic *berô .
Noun
beer m (plural beren , diminutive beertje n )
a bear , any member of the family Ursidae
De beer drinkt bier. The bear drinks beer.
( figurative ) a person who is physically impressive and/or crude
Wat een beer van een vent daar voorin, he? What a bear of a guy there in front, huh?
Derived terms
Descendants
Etymology 2
Een beer of steunbeer . — A buttress .
From Middle Dutch bêer , from Old Dutch *bēr , from Proto-West Germanic *bair .
Noun
beer m (plural beren , diminutive beertje n )
boar (male swine)
De kinderboerderij heeft een aantal zeugen en maar één beer . The petting zoo has a number of sows and only one boar .
buttress ; protective external construction, notably against ice or supporting the weight of the main building
a boar-shaped type of battering ram
a male badger
Derived terms
Descendants
Etymology 3
From Middle Dutch bere , from Old Dutch , from a derivative of Proto-West Germanic *bermō ( “ yeast ” ) , related to Old English beorma , Albanian burmë .
Noun
beer m (plural beren , diminutive beertje n )
( now dialectal ) liquid, notably human manure ( excrement gathered in a pit to fertilize )
Wie doet er nu beer in zijn bier? Ik haat beer ! Who in the world would put liquid manure in his beer? I hate manure !
Derived terms
Etymology 4
Borrowed from German Bär . Cognate to etymology 1.
Noun
beer m (plural beren )
( university slang ) debt
Synonym: schuld
Door haar gokverslaving zat ze met een enorme beer opgescheept. Due to her gambling addiction she was saddled with an enormous debt .
( university slang ) creditor ( one to whom one owes debt )
Synonym: schuldeiser
Henry zag niet zijn beren op de weg, maar wel bij hem op de stoep. Henry didn't see his creditors on the road, but he did see them on his doorstep.
References
M. J. Koenen & J. Endepols, Verklarend Handwoordenboek der Nederlandse Taal (tevens Vreemde-woordentolk) , Groningen, Wolters-Noordhoff, 1969 (26th edition)
Latin
Verb
beer
first-person singular present passive subjunctive of beō
Limburgish
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle Low German bêr , from Old Saxon bior , from Proto-West Germanic *beuʀ , from Proto-Germanic *beuzą .
Noun
beer n
beer
Etymology 2
From Middle Dutch bere , from Old Dutch bēro , from Proto-West Germanic *bair .
Noun
beer m
boar (male swine)
Etymology 3
From Middle High German ber , from Old High German beri . Alternatively from Middle Dutch bere , from Old Dutch *beri . Both ultimately from Proto-West Germanic *baʀi , from Proto-Germanic *bazją , possibly from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeh₂- .
Noun
beer f
berry
Middle Dutch
Etymology
From Old Dutch *bēr , from Proto-West Germanic *bair .
Noun
bêer m
boar , male pig
Inflection
This noun needs an inflection-table template .
Descendants
Further reading
Old French
Etymology
Inherited from Early Medieval Latin badāre .
Verb
beer
( transitive ) to open
( intransitive ) to open
( chiefly ) to pant ; to breathe heavily
( figuratively ) to desire ; to lust for
Conjugation
This verb conjugates as a first-group verb ending in -er . This verb has irregularities in its conjugation. Old French conjugation varies significantly by date and by region. The following conjugation should be treated as a guide.
beer
avoir beé
en beant
gerund of avoir + past participle
beant
beé
indicative
jo
tu
il
nos
vos
il
simple tenses
present
be
bees
bee
beons
beez
beent
imperfect
beoie , beeie , beoe , beeve
beoies , beeies , beoes , beeves
beoit , beeit , beot , beeve
beïiens , beïens
beïiez , beïez
beoient , beeient , beoent , beevent
preterite
beai
beas
bea
beames
beastes
beerent
future
beerai
beeras
beera
beerons
beeroiz , beereiz , beerez
beeront
conditional
beeroie , beereie
beeroies , beereies
beeroit , beereit
beeriiens , beeriens
beeriiez , beeriez
beeroient , beereient
compound tenses
present perfect
present tense of avoir + past participle
pluperfect
imperfect tense of avoir + past participle
past anterior
preterite tense of avoir + past participle
future perfect
future tense of avoir + past participle
conditional perfect
conditional tense of avoir + past participle
subjunctive
que jo
que tu
qu’il
que nos
que vos
qu’il
simple tenses
present
be
bez
bet
beons
beez
beent
imperfect
beasse
beasses
beast
beïssons , beïssiens
beïssoiz , beïssez , beïssiez
beassent
compound tenses
past
present subjunctive of avoir + past participle
pluperfect
imperfect subjunctive of avoir + past participle
imperative
–
tu
–
nos
vos
–
—
bee
—
beons
beez
—
Derived terms
Descendants
References
Godefroy, Frédéric , Dictionnaire de l’ancienne langue française et de tous ses dialectes du IX e au XV e siècle (1881) (beer )
Somali
Etymology 1
From Proto-Cushitic *baar- , from Proto-Afroasiatic *bur- . Cognates include Afar baaxo , Saho baarho , Arabic بَرّ ( barr ) , Hebrew בַּר ( bar ) , and Sabaean 𐩨𐩧 ( br ) .
Noun
beer ?
cultivated field , garden
Etymology 2
Noun
beer ?
liver
References
Puglielli, Annarita, Mansuur, Cabdalla Cumar (2012 ) “beer”, in Qaamuuska Af-Soomaliga , Rome: RomaTrE-Press , →ISBN , page 101