hwyr
Welsh
Etymology
From Middle Welsh hwyr, from Proto-Brythonic *huɨr; perhaps a borrowing from Latin sērus[1] (although Latin loanwords in Proto-Brythonic usually retain word-initial s), or a native formation such as a blend of the ancestor of hir (“long”) with its comparative hwy, from the same root.
Pronunciation
- (North Wales) IPA(key): /huːɨ̯r/
- (South Wales) IPA(key): /hʊi̯r/
- Rhymes: -ʊɨ̯r
Adjective
hwyr (feminine singular hwyr, plural hwyrion, equative hwyred, comparative hwyrach, superlative hwyraf, not mutable)
Noun
hwyr m (plural hwyrau, not mutable)
- evening, nightfall
- Synonyms: cyfnos, brig y nos
Derived terms
- croes yr hwyr (“sweet rocket, dame's violet”)
- (nid) hwyrach (“maybe, perhaps”)
- hwyrbryd (“evening meal”)
- hwyrnos (“evening”)
- hwyrol (“pertaining to evening”)
- yn hwyr neu'n hwyrach (“sooner or later”)