sword

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A long bladed weapon with a grip and typically a pommel and crossguard (together forming a hilt), which is designed to cut, stab, slash and/or hack.
  2. A suit in certain playing card decks, particularly those used in Spain and Italy, or those used for divination.
  3. A card of this suit.
  4. One of the end bars by which the lay of a hand loom is suspended.
  5. Violence; military might.
verb
  1. To stab or cut with a sword
name
  1. A surname.

Pronunciation

[sɔɹd] en-us-sword.ogg [sɔːd] [soːd] [soːɹd] /so(r)ɖ/ /swɔ(r)ɖ/ /so(ː)ɹd/ /soəd/ /swɔːrd/ /s(w)ɔːrd/ /s(w)uːrd/ /swɔrd/ /swʊrd/ /swɛrd/ /swɛːrd/

Word forms

sword swords swerd sweard swoord swoorde sworde swording sworded Soard

Etymology

Inherited from West Midland Middle English sword (swerd in most dialects), from Old English sweord (“sword”), from Proto-West Germanic *swerd (“sword”), from Proto-Germanic *swerdą (“sword”), possibly from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂w- (“sharp”). Cognates Cognate with North Frisian Swērt, Swiirt, swörd (“sword”), Saterland Frisian Swid, Swäid (“sword”), West Frisian swurd (“sword”), Dutch zwaard (“sword”), German Schwert (“sword”), Luxembourgish Schwäert (“sword”), Vilamovian świert (“sword”), Yiddish שווערד (shverd, “sword”), Danish sværd (“sword”), Faroese svørð (“sword”), Icelandic sverð (“sword”), Norn svird (“small longish object”), Norwegian Bokmål sverd (“sword”), Norwegian Nynorsk sverd, svørd (“sword”), Swedish svärd (“sword”); also Belarusian све́рдзел (svjérdzjel, “drill, drill bit”), Bulgarian свре́дел (svrédel, “drill, drill bit”), Czech svider (“drill bit”), Polish świder (“drill”), Russian сверло́ (sverló, “auger, bore, drill, drill bit”), Serbo-Croatian свр̏дло, svȑdlo (“auger”), Slovene sveder (“drill”), Ukrainian све́рдел (svérdel), све́рдло (svérdlo, “drill bit”).

Translations

Finnish: miekat Polish: miecz
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.