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cinder. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
cinder, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
cinder in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
cinder you have here. The definition of the word
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cinder, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From Middle English cinder, sinder, from Old English sinder (“cinder, dross, slag, scoria, dross of iron, impurity of metal”), from Proto-West Germanic *sindr, from Proto-Germanic *sindrą, *sindraz (“dross, cinder, slag”), from Proto-Indo-European *sendʰro- (“coagulating fluid, liquid slag, scale, cinder”). Cognate with Scots sinder (“ember, cinder”), West Frisian sindel, sintel (“cinder, slag”), Dutch sintel (“cinder, ember, slag”), Middle Low German sinder, sinter (“cinder, slag”), German Sinter (“dross of iron, scale”), Danish sinder (“spark of ignited iron, cinder”), Swedish sinder (“slag or dross from a forge”), Icelandic sindur (“scoring”), Old Church Slavonic сѧдра (sędra, “lime cinder, gypsum”). Spelling (c- for s-) influenced by unrelated French cendre (“ashes”). Doublet of sinter.
Pronunciation
Noun
cinder (plural cinders)
- Partially or mostly burnt material that results from incomplete combustion of coal or wood etc.; it often rides the rising smoke column into the air, and it can pose a fire hazard when it lands, in dry conditions
1962 June, Cecil J. Allen, “Locomotive Running Past and Present”, in Modern Railways, page 399:Travellers over the London & North Western main line in bygone days will need no reminder of the pattering of cinders on the carriage roofs, the fountains of sparks from the chimneys at night and the distance from which the exhaust of approaching locomotives could be heard, due to the fierceness of their blast in such conditions.
- An ember.
- Slag from a metal furnace.
- (dated, colloquial) Any strong stimulant added to tea, soda water, etc.
1846, Catherine Grace Frances Gore, Selected Works, volume 2, page 9:Oh, horrid proposition! One would imagine, Tom, that you had been a coal-heaver. Had you said soda and cinder, I would have seconded the motion.
2021, Glenda Young, The Miner's Lass:She'd sit by the fire, arms crossed, demanding that Ruby spike her tea with a cinder. But Ruby would never give in to her demands, no matter how much her mam begged. There was no alcohol in the house now; Arthur had made sure of that in an effort to get Mary sober.
Derived terms
Translations
partially or mostly burnt material
- Arabic: جَمْرُ مُنْطَفِيّ m (jamru munṭafiyy)
- Armenian: անթեղ (hy) (antʻeġ)
- Bulgarian: сгурия (bg) f (sgurija), пепел (bg) f (pepel)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 煤渣 (zh) (méizhā), 灰燼/灰烬 (zh) (huījìn), 餘燼/余烬 (zh) (yújìn)
- Czech: oharek (cs) m
- Danish: please add this translation if you can
- Dutch: as (nl)
- Finnish: hiili (fi) (partially burnt), tuhka (fi) (ash)
- French: cendre (fr) f
- Georgian: წიდა (c̣ida)
- German: Asche (de) f
- Gothic: 𐌰𐌶𐌲𐍉 f (azgō)
- Irish: aibhleog dhóite f
- Italian: cenere (it) f
- Japanese: 燃え殻 (もえがら, moegara)
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Latin: favilla (la) f
- Maori: ngārahu, ngārehu
- Norman: chendre f (Jersey, Guernsey)
- Norwegian: aske (no)
- Polish: oparzelina f, zgorzelina f
- Portuguese: borralho (pt) m, borralha (pt) f
- Russian: зола́ (ru) f (zolá), пе́пел (ru) m (pépel)
- Slovak: ohorok m
- Spanish: ceniza (es) f
- Swedish: slagg (sv) n, aska (sv) c
- Thai: ถ่าน (th) (tàan)
- Turkish: kor (tr)
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Translations to be checked
See also
Verb
cinder (third-person singular simple present cinders, present participle cindering, simple past and past participle cindered)
- (transitive) To reduce to cinders.
- (transitive) To cover with cinders.
We plan to cinder this path.
Translations
to reduce something to cinders
See also
Anagrams