Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" Compare Halang <span class="searchmatch">nơr</span> (“language; bite; handful”). IPA(key): /nər/ <span class="searchmatch">nơ̆r</span> language ʼBai pơhrăm <span class="searchmatch">nơ̆r</span> Bahnar Kontum Kontum Bahnar...
Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" <span class="searchmatch">NOR</span> (international standards) ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 country code for Norway. Synonym: NO (alpha-2) From <span class="searchmatch">nor</span>. Reinterpreted as NOT...
Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> (international standards) ISO 639-2 & ISO 639-3 language code for Norwegian. English Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> Wikipedia (Received...
Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" IPA(key): [<span class="searchmatch">ˈnor</span>] <span class="searchmatch">Nor</span> m anim (female equivalent Norka) Norwegian (native of Norway) Declension of <span class="searchmatch">Nor</span> (hard masculine animate)...
See also: Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" IPA(key): /<span class="searchmatch">ˈɲoɾ</span>/ [<span class="searchmatch">ˈɲoɾ</span>] Rhymes: -oɾ Syllabification: <span class="searchmatch">ñor</span> <span class="searchmatch">ñor</span> m (plural <span class="searchmatch">ñores</span>) (colloquial) clipping of señor ña...
of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" IPA(key): [<span class="searchmatch">noːr</span>] <span class="searchmatch">Nór</span> m pers (female equivalent Nórka) Norwegian (person from Norway or of Norwegian descent) Nórsko nórsky nórčina “<span class="searchmatch">Nór</span>”, in...
See also: Appendix:Variations of "<span class="searchmatch">nor</span>" IPA(key): [<span class="searchmatch">ˈnor̝̊</span>] <span class="searchmatch">noř</span> second-person singular imperative of nořit...
<span class="searchmatch">nor</span> … <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> neither … <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> used for showing that something is not true of two or more people, things, actions, qualities, or ideas (This entry is a translation...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">NORs</span> <span class="searchmatch">nors</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> RONs, SORN, orns, sorn From Middle Dutch <span class="searchmatch">nors</span>, norts (“surly”), with further origin disputed. Possibly from nort (“north”)...
neither hide <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> hair of him since. 1885, Mark Twain, chapter 41, in Huckleberry Finn: Not a one of us could catch hide <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> hair <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> sight <span class="searchmatch">nor</span> sound of them...