silver

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A lustrous, white, metallic element, atomic number 47, atomic weight 107.87, symbol Ag.
  2. Coins made from silver or any similar white metal.
  3. Cutlery and other eating utensils, whether silver or made from some other white metal.
  4. Any items made from silver or any other white metal.
  5. A shiny gray color.
  6. a silver medal
  7. Anything resembling silver; something shiny and white.
adj
  1. Made from silver.
  2. Made from another white metal.
  3. Having a color like silver: a shiny gray.
  4. Denoting the twenty-fifth anniversary, especially of a wedding.
  5. Premium, but inferior to gold.
  6. Pertaining or relating to elderly persons.
  7. Having the clear, musical tone of silver; soft and clear in sound.
verb
  1. To acquire a silvery colour.
  2. To cover with silver, or with a silvery metal.
  3. To polish like silver; to impart a brightness to, like that of silver.
  4. To make hoary, or white, like silver.
name
  1. An English surname originating as an occupation for a silversmith or a rich man, or for someone having silvery gray hair or living by a silvery brook.
  2. A surname from German.
  3. A unisex given name from English from the metal, or transferred from the surname.

Pronunciation

/ˈsɪl.və/ sĭl'vər /ˈsɪl.vɚ/ en-us-silver.ogg /ˈsɪlvɚ/

Word forms

silver silvers more silver most silver silvering silvered

Etymology

Etymology tree substratebor.? Proto-Germanic *silubrą Proto-West Germanic *silubr Old English seolfor Middle English silver English silver Inherited from Middle English silver, selver, sulver, from Old English seolfor, from Proto-West Germanic *silubr, from Proto-Germanic *silubrą (“silver”), of uncertain origin. cognates and etymology discussion Cognate with Scots siller (“silver”), Saterland Frisian Säälwer (“silver”), West Frisian sulver (“silver”), Dutch zilver (“silver”), German Low German Silver, Sülver (“silver”), German Silber (“silver”), Swedish silver (“silver”), Icelandic silfur (“silver”). The Germanic word has parallels in Baltic and Slavic (Old Church Slavonic сьрєбро (sĭrebro), Lithuanian sidabras), Celtic (Celtiberian silaPur-), and outside Indo-European, in Basque zilar and Proto-Berber *a-ẓrəf, but the ultimate origin of the word is unknown. Adjective sense 4 (“denoting a twenty-fifth anniversary”) generalized from silver wedding, itself a calque of German Silberhochzeit.

Translations

Abaza: рызна Abkhaz: араʒны Abkhaz: аразны Acehnese: pirak Afar: lakqó Afrikaans: silwer Ahom: 𑜂𑜢𑜤𑜃𑜫 Akkadian: 𒆬𒌓 Aklanon: pilak Albanian: argjend Albanian: rgjand Albanian: serm Southern Altai: кӱмӱш Southern Altai: мӧҥӱн Amharic: ብር Arabic: فِضَّة Arabic: فضة Arabic: فُضَّة Arabic: نقرة Aragonese: plata Archi: арси Armenian: արծաթ Armenian: արծաթեղեն Old Armenian: արծաթ Aromanian: asimi Assamese: ৰূপ Asturian: plata Avar: гӏарац Aymara: qullqi Azerbaijani: كومش Azerbaijani: گومش Azerbaijani: gümüş Baluchi: چاندی Baluchi: نگرہ Bambara: warijè Bashkir: көмөш Basque: zilar Belarusian: серабро́ Belarusian: срэ́бра Bengali: রুপা Bhojpuri: 𑂩𑂴𑂣𑂰 Bhojpuri: 𑂒𑂰𑂢𑂲 Eastern Bontoc: pelak Breton: arc'hant Bulgarian: сребро́ Burmese: ငွေ Buryat: мүнгэн Catalan: argent Catalan: plata Cebuano: pilak Central Atlas Tamazight: ⴰⵥⵔⴼ Eastern Cham: pariak Chechen: дети Cherokee: ᎠᏕᎸ ᎤᏁᎬ
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