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norther. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
norther, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
norther in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
norther you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From north + -er.
Pronunciation
- (noun, verb) IPA(key): /ˈnɔː(ɹ)θə(ɹ)/
- (adjective) IPA(key): /ˈnɔː(ɹ)ðə(ɹ)/
Noun
norther (plural northers)
- A strong north wind, a wind blowing from the north.
1882, Signal Service Notes - Issues 1-20, page 87:Brisk winds from the south for several days in Texas are generally followed by a "norther."
2010, Barry Warburton, Chasseur & St Lawrence, page 18:Keep her going South-South East as fast as she'll take it, Shelby. It'll be a wet ride till we get outside the stream with this Norther.
Derived terms
Verb
norther (third-person singular simple present northers, present participle northering, simple past and past participle northered)
- To move or go toward the north.
1893, F. Adams, New Egypt, page 86:The hills […] run inland with a slight northering tendency.
1919, Century Readings for a Course in American Literature, page 870:But from one impulse, like a northering sun, / The innumerable outburst is begun, / And in that common sunlight all men know / A common ecstasy.
2008, Paul H. Fry, Wordsworth and the Poetry of What We Are, Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 15:One could also speak of a northering of imagination, an attenuation, chilling, emptying out. But that sense of diminishment in going north may be mistaken, ...
2014, Colin Fletcher, River: One Man's Journey Down the Colorado, Source to Sea, Vintage, →ISBN:The map maintained that the mountains were those along whose far flank I'd northered on foot, and one molar-tooth peak certainly looked like Squaretop.
2017, Vernor Vinge, The Zones of Thought Series: (A Fire Upon the Deep, The Children of the Sky, A Deepness in the Sky), Macmillan, →ISBN:"In that direction, we have a southbound breeze all the way to the ground." […] The northering sun was peeking under the curve of the balloon. “We're coming at them from out of the sun.”
2021, Brian Gingrich, The Pace of Fiction: Narrative Movement and the Novel, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 89:We follow Waverley in the reverse progress of his own private eastering, and (the eastering here technically a northering) we make our way through […]
- (of wind) To blow from (closer to) the north, pushing ships (etc) towards the south; to have its apparent source shift northward.
- 1667, record quoted in 1940, Publications of the Navy Records Society, page 8:
- The 23 February 1667 Sunday. All the morning flat calm until after six. At the coming away of the ebb sprang up a small gale at W.N.W. and N.W. by W., that we stretched along the shore toward the Ness, S.W. course. The wind northered and came easterly, a small gale. We stayed for our boat until one, which we had sent to search 4 French shallops that assured lay there to lade wool.
1868, Works of the Camden Society, page 74:Att noone it came S. afterwardes westerly, and after sunnesett it northered, and blew a verie stiffe gale; some raine.
Adjective
norther
- (now chiefly dialectal) comparative form of north: more north; northern
- 1931 April 24, The Princeton Alumni Weekly, volume XXI, number 28, page 700 (of the compiled volume 31):
- "Northest" of all
- There is something about Scandinavia that leads those who live there to stress the "northness" of their position This gentleman, it will be remembered, claimed to live "norther" than any other man. he placed chief emphasis on the fact that no man lived norther than he.
1989, Willy Holtzman, “San Antonio Sunset”, in Ramon Delgado, editor, The Best Short Plays, 1988-1989, page 342:Clerk: […] And he come across this one salesman. From up north.
Stone: North Texas?
Clerk: Norther than that. Thought he said New York, but I could be mistaken.
2020, Avro Mukerji, Few Urban Thoughts, page 9:Nothing can be norther than the North Pole […]
Derived terms
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