oar

See also: OAR and öar

English

Etymology

Old English ār, from Proto-Germanic *airō (oar). Cognate to Old Norse ár.

Pronunciation

Noun

an oar

oar (plural oars)

  1. An implement used to propel a boat or a ship in the water, having a flat blade at one end, being rowed from the other end and being normally fastened to the vessel.
  2. An oarsman; a rower.
    He is a good oar.
  3. (zoology) An oar-like swimming organ of various invertebrates.

Synonyms

  • (implement used to propel a boat): paddle

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

oar (third-person singular simple present oars, present participle oaring, simple past and past participle oared)

  1. To row; to travel with, or as if with, oars.
    • 1866, Thomas S. Muir, Barra Head (page 52)
      The weather was fine, and whilst oaring along I would fain have landed on the islands between; but fearful of a change, and already half worn-out by my previous trail, I let them go by with the comforting resolve of turning them up on some future occasion.
    • 1950, Mervyn Peake, Gormenghast
      Turning the long tables upside down — and there were twelve of them — they seated themselves, one behind another, within the upturned table tops as though they were boats and were about to oar their way into some fabulous ocean.
    • 1996, Peter J. Bowler, Life's Splendid Drama
      In Nopsca's theory, flight evolved as a means of running more quickly over the ground: "Birds originated from bipedal, long-tailed cursorial reptiles which during running oared along in the air by flapping their free anterior extremities."

Translations

Anagrams


West Frisian

Adjective

oar

  1. other
  2. different

Inflection

This adjective needs an inflection-table template.

Derived terms

Further reading

  • oar (I)”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011
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