dour
English
WOTD – 8 November 2010
Etymology
From Scots dour, possibly from Latin dūrus (“hard, stern”), via Middle Irish dúr. Compare French dur, Catalan dur, Italian duro, Portuguese duro, Romanian dur, Spanish duro. Doublet of dure.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈdʊə/, /ˈdaʊə/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈdʊɹ/, /ˈdaʊɚ/, /ˈdaʊ.ɚ/
- (Scotland) IPA(key): /ˈdur/
- Rhymes: -aʊə(ɹ), -ʊə(ɹ)
- Homophones: Daur, doer, door, dower (depending on speaker) The traditional Scottish pronunciation of this originally Scottish word is doer.
Adjective
dour (comparative dourer or more dour, superlative dourest or most dour)
- Stern, harsh and forbidding.
- Synonyms: forbidding, harsh, severe, stern
- 1961 October, “Editorial: The importance of the "Roadrailer"”, in Trains Illustrated, page 577:
- The principal reason is that, in competition with modern road vehicles running over motorways, B.R. has a dour struggle to match the performance of its rivals cost-wise.
- 2017, chapter 6, in Elizabeth Manton, transl., Utopia for Realists, Kindle edition, Bloomsbury Publishing, translation of Gratis geld voor iedereen by Rutger Bregman, page 149:
- I was reminded of the dour priests and salesmen of the nineteenth century who believed that the plebs wouldn’t be able to handle getting the vote, or a decent wage, or, least of all, leisure, and who backed the seventy-hour workweek as an efficacious instrument in the fight against liquor.
- 2022, Gary Gerstle, chapter 4, in The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order […] , New York: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, Part II. The Neoliberal Order, 1970–2020:
- Hayek had contributed the foreword, in which he declared that “he got so fascinated” by the book—high praise from the dour Viennese sage—that he read it from start to finish in one sitting.
- Unyielding and obstinate.
- Synonym: stubborn
- Expressing gloom or melancholy.
- Synonyms: dejected, gloomy, melancholic, sullen
Translations
stern, harsh and forbidding
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unyielding and obstinate
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expressing gloom or melancholy
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Breton
Etymology
From Proto-Brythonic *duβr, from Proto-Celtic *dubros, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰubʰrós (“deep”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈduːr/
audio (file)
Scots
Etymology
From Middle Irish dúr, from Latin dūrus (“hard”).
Descendants
- → English: dour
References
- “dour” in the Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries.
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