deemster
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English demester, demster, equivalent to deem (“to judge”) + -ster.
Noun
deemster (plural deemsters)
- (now dialectal, Isle of Man) A judge; one who pronounces sentence or doom.
- 1767, The Gentleman's and London Magazine:
- If you hire a house for a year, and before the end of a month, happen to disagree with your landlord, he goes to the Deemster, and tells him, that he suspects you intend to leave the island, without paying his rent; […]
Related terms
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch deemster, demster (“dark”), from Old Dutch *thimster (in the compound thimsternisse (“darkness”)), from Proto-West Germanic *þimstr.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈdeːm.stər/
Audio: (file) - Hyphenation: deem‧ster
Noun
deemster m (uncountable)
- (Belgium, dated in Netherlands) twilight
- Synonyms: schemering, halfduister, halfdonker, deemstering, schemerdonker, schemerlicht, tweedonker, tweelicht
Derived terms
- deemsteren