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, 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
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English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle English rare , from Old French rare , rere ( “ rare, uncommon ” ) , from Latin rārus ( “ loose, spaced apart, thin, infrequent ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *h₁reh₁- ( “ friable, thin ” ) . Replaced native Middle English gesen ( “ rare, scarce ” ) (from Old English gǣsne ), Middle English seld ( “ rare, uncommon ” ) (from Old English selden ), and Middle English seldscene ( “ rare, rarely seen, infrequent ” ) (from Old English seldsēne ).
Adjective
rare (comparative rarer , superlative rarest )
Very uncommon ; scarce .
Black pearls are very rare and therefore very valuable.
Synonyms: scarce , selcouth , seld , selly , geason , uncommon ; see also Thesaurus:rare
Antonyms: common , frequent ; see also Thesaurus:common
2013 May-June, David Van Tassel , Lee DeHaan , “Wild Plants to the Rescue ”, in American Scientist , volume 101 , number 3:Plant breeding is always a numbers game. [ …] The wild species we use are rich in genetic variation, and individual plants are highly heterozygous and do not breed true. In addition, we are looking for rare alleles, so the more plants we try, the better.
2017 , BioWare , Mass Effect: Andromeda (Science Fiction ), Redwood City: Electronic Arts, →OCLC , PC, scene: Technology: Augmentations Codex entry:While many material components in Andromeda are familiar, we have also discovered rarer and more valuable materials; attributable to exposure to the Scourge, or mysterious alien technology.
( of a gas ) Thin ; of low density .
( UK , slang ) Good; enjoyable .
1981 , Chris Difford (lyrics), Glenn Tilbrook (vocal), "Vanity Fair" (song):
Sees her reflection in a butcher shop.
She finds it all quite rare
That her meat's all vanity fair.
Derived terms
Translations
very uncommon
Albanian: rrallë (sq)
Arabic: نَادِر ( nādir )
Egyptian Arabic: نادر ( nādir )
South Levantine Arabic: نادر ( náder )
Asturian: raru
Azerbaijani: nadir (az) , seyrək
Bashkir: һирәк ( hirək )
Basque: arraro
Belarusian: рэ́дкі (be) ( rédki )
Bulgarian: ря́дък (bg) ( rjádǎk ) , необикновен (bg) ( neobiknoven )
Catalan: rar (ca)
Chinese:
Mandarin: 稀少 (zh) ( xīshǎo ) , 稀疏 (zh) ( xīshū ) , 稀有 (zh) ( xīyǒu ) , 罕見 / 罕见 (zh) ( hǎnjiàn )
Czech: vzácný (cs) m , řídký (cs)
Danish: sjælden (da)
Dutch: zeldzaam (nl)
Esperanto: malofta , rara (eo)
Estonian: haruldane , erakordne
Faroese: sjáldsamur , rárur
Finnish: harvinainen (fi)
French: rare (fr) , peu commun
Friulian: râr
Galician: raro (gl)
German: selten (de) , rar (de)
Greek: σπάνιος (el) ( spánios )
Ancient: σπάνιος ( spánios )
Hebrew: נדיר (he) ( nadir )
Hindi: दुर्लभ (hi) ( durlabh ) , नायाब (hi) ( nāyāb ) , नादिर (hi) ( nādir ) , कमयाब (hi) ( kamyāb ) , अप्राप्य (hi) ( aprāpya )
Hungarian: ritka (hu)
Ido: rara (io)
Indonesian: jarang (id) , langka (id)
Ingrian: harva
Irish: annamh
Italian: raro (it)
Japanese: 珍しい (ja) ( mezurashii ) , 稀な (ja) ( mare na )
Korean: 드물다 (ko) ( deumulda ) , 희귀(稀貴)하다 ( huigwihada )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: نایاب ( nayab )
Latin: rārus m
Latvian: rets (lv)
Lithuanian: retas m
Macedonian: редок ( redok )
Malay: jarang (ms) , nadir
Maori: onge , ongeonge , mokomokorea , mokorea , mōmōhanga
Navajo: bídin hóyééʼ
Norman: rare ( Jersey )
Norwegian: skjelden
Occitan: requist (oc) , rar (oc) , rare (oc) , escàs (oc) , arrarit
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: рѣдъкъ ( rědŭkŭ )
Old English: selden , seldlic
Persian: کمیاب (fa) ( kamyâb ) , نایاب (fa) ( nâyâb ) , شاذ (fa) ( šâzz )
Polish: rzadki (pl)
Portuguese: raro (pt)
Romanian: rar (ro)
Romansch: rar , rer
Russian: ре́дкий (ru) ( rédkij )
Sanskrit: विरल (sa) ( virala ) , दुर्लभ (sa) ( durlabha )
Sardinian: raru
Scottish Gaelic: gann , ainneamh
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ре́дак , рије́дак
Roman: rédak (sh) , rijédak (sh)
Sicilian: raru (scn)
Simbanese: arôre
Slovak: riedky , vzácny m
Slovene: rédek (sl)
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: rědki
Spanish: escaso (es) , raro (es) , insólito (es) , inusual (es) , infrecuente (es) , inhabitual , ralo (es)
Swedish: sällsynt (sv) , ovanlig (sv)
Tagalog: bihira
Telugu: అరుదు (te) ( arudu ) , దుర్లభము (te) ( durlabhamu )
Turkish: nadir (tr) , ender (tr) , nadide (tr)
Ukrainian: рідки́й ( ridkýj ) , рі́дкісний ( rídkisnyj )
Urdu: شاذ ( śāz )
Venetan: raro
Vietnamese: hiếm (vi)
Welsh: prin (cy)
Zazaki: nadir
Noun
rare (plural rares )
( gaming ) A scarce or uncommon item.
1995 , George Baxter, Larry W. Smith, Mastering Magic Cards , page 116 :Most of the time, you do this by trading low-valued rares for more valuable ones or trading uncommons for rares . Other times it's trading cards that are in print for ones that are out of print, or low-value rares for good uncommons.
Etymology 2
From a dialectal variant of rear , from Middle English rere , from Old English hrēr , hrēre ( “ not thoroughly cooked, underdone, lightly boiled ” ) , from hrēran ( “ to move, shake, agitate ” ) , from Proto-Germanic *hrōzijaną ( “ to stir ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *ḱroHs- ( “ to mix, stir, cook ” ) . Related to Old English hrōr ( “ stirring, busy, active, strong, brave ” ) . More at rear .
Adjective
rare (comparative rarer or more rare , superlative rarest or most rare )
( cooking ) Particularly of meat , especially beefsteak : cooked very lightly , so the meat is still red .
Antonym: well done
1717 , John Dryden , “Book VIII. [The Story of Baucis and Philemon.]”, in Ovid’s Metamorphoses in Fifteen Books. , London: Jacob Tonson , , →OCLC , page 285 :Then Curds and Cream, the Flow'r of Country Fare, / And new-laid Eggs, which Baucis ’ buſie Care / Turn’d by a gentle Fire, and roaſted rare .
Derived terms
Translations
cooked very lightly
Belarusian: непрасмажаны ( njeprasmažany ) , з крывёй ( z kryvjój ) , з кроўю ( z króŭju )
Bulgarian: недоварен (bg) ( nedovaren ) , недопечен (bg) ( nedopečen )
Catalan: cru (ca)
Chinese:
Mandarin: 一分熟 ( yīfēnshú )
Czech: krvavý (cs)
Danish: rød (da)
Dutch: halfrauw , saignant (nl)
Finnish: sisältä raaka , raaka (fi) , verinen (fi)
French: saignant (fr)
German: blutig (de) , englisch (de)
Hebrew: נא (he) m ( ná ) , נִמְרָשׁ (he) m ( nimrásh ) ( unused )
Hungarian: véres (hu)
Italian: al sangue
Japanese: レア (ja) ( rea )
Luxembourgish: bluddeg
Maori: tūāmata , tōtoto
Navajo: tʼóó shichʼilígo
Polish: krwisty (pl)
Portuguese: mal passado
Romanian: în sânge
Russian: непрожа́ренный ( neprožárennyj ) , с кро́вью ( s króvʹju ) , крова́вый (ru) ( krovávyj ) , кровяни́стый (ru) ( krovjanístyj )
Spanish: crudo (es) , poco hecho
Swedish: blodig (sv)
Yiddish: נישט־דערבראָטן ( nisht-derbrotn )
Etymology 3
Variant of rear .
Verb
rare (third-person singular simple present rares , present participle raring , simple past and past participle rared )
( US , intransitive ) To rear , rise up, start backwards.
2006 , Thomas Pynchon, Against the Day , Vintage, published 2007 , page 328 :Frank pretended to rare back as if bedazzled, shielding his eyes with a forearm.
( US , transitive ) To rear , bring up, raise .
2013 , Janet Peery, What the Thunder Said: A Novella and Stories , →ISBN :Here I have to say that I was walking along dark-hearted, my nose out of joint about Audie's notice of her, for just as quickly as my feelings kindled, my old envy rared .
Usage notes
Principal current, non-literary use is of the present participle raring with a verb in "raring to". The principal verb in that construction is go . Thus, raring to go ("eager (to start something)") is the expression in which rare is most often encountered as a verb.
Etymology 4
Compare rather , rath .
Adjective
rare (comparative more rare , superlative most rare )
( obsolete ) Early .
1614–1615 , Homer , “The Sixth Book of Homer’s Odysseys”, in Geo Chapman , transl., Homer’s Odysses. , London: Rich Field , for Nathaniell Butter , published 1615 , →OCLC ; republished in The Odysseys of Homer, , volume I, London: John Russell Smith , , 1857 , →OCLC , page 147 , lines 420–423 :The men, that sway / In work of those tools that so fit our state, / Are rude mechanicals, that rare and late / Work in the market-place;
References
Rare in The Concise New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English
Anagrams
Danish
Adjective
rare
plural and definite singular attributive of rar
Dutch
Pronunciation
Adjective
rare
inflection of raar :
masculine / feminine singular attributive
definite neuter singular attributive
plural attributive
Noun
rare m (plural raren , diminutive rareke n )
weird person
Synonym: rare vogel
References
French
Etymology
Borrowed (in this form) from Latin rārus . Compare the inherited Old French rer , rere .
Pronunciation
Adjective
rare (plural rares )
rare
Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams
German
Pronunciation
Adjective
rare
inflection of rar :
strong / mixed nominative / accusative feminine singular
strong nominative / accusative plural
weak nominative all-gender singular
weak accusative feminine / neuter singular
Ido
Pronunciation
Adverb
rare
rarely
Antonyms: freque , ofte
Italian
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈra.re/
Rhymes: -are
Hyphenation: rà‧re
Adjective
rare
feminine plural of raro
Anagrams
Latin
Etymology 1
From rārus + -ē .
Pronunciation
Adverb
rārē (comparative rārius , superlative rārissimē )
thinly , sparsely , here and there
rarely , seldom
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Pronunciation
Adjective
rāre
vocative masculine singular of rārus
References
“rare ”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 ) A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press
rare in Gaffiot, Félix (1934 ) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français , Hachette.
Middle English
Etymology
From Old French rer and Latin rārus .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈraːr(ə)/ , /ˈrɛːr(ə)/
Adjective
rare
airy , vacuous
porous , breathable
sparsely spread
rare , uncommon , scarce
small , little
Descendants
References
Norman
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin rārus .
Adjective
rare m or f
( Jersey ) rare
Derived terms
Norwegian Bokmål
Adjective
rare
inflection of rar :
definite singular
plural
Norwegian Nynorsk
Adjective
rare
inflection of rar :
definite singular
plural
Swedish
Adjective
rare
definite natural masculine singular of rar
Anagrams
Yola
Etymology
From Middle English rare , from Old French rer , from Latin rārus .
Pronunciation
Adjective
rare
rare
1867 , CONGRATULATORY ADDRESS IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY , page 116 , lines 2-4 :ye wake o'hopes ee-blighte, stampe na yer zwae be rare an lightzom. the consequence of disappointed hopes, confirms your rule to be rare and enlightened.
References
Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland , London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867 , page 116