labber

English

Etymology

From lab +‎ -er.

Noun

labber (plural labbers)

  1. (informal) A person taking part in a laboratory session.
    • 2011, N. Andre Cossette, The Art of Debate: 12th Edition, page 33:
      If the lab leader is more experienced than the labbers, i.e. a senior debater overseeing a group of novices, the lab leaders should stay in the background during the topic analysis part []

Danish

Noun

labber c

  1. indefinite plural of lab

Dutch

Etymology

Related to labberen.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈlɑ.bər/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: lab‧ber
  • Rhymes: -ɑbər

Adjective

labber (not comparable)

  1. (weather, chiefly of the wind) weak, soft

Declension

Declension of labber
uninflected labber
inflected labbere
comparative
positive
predicative/adverbial labber
indefinite m./f. sing. labbere
n. sing. labber
plural labbere
definite labbere
partitive labbers

Luxembourgish

Adjective

labber (masculine labberen, neuter labbert, comparative méi labber, superlative am labbersten)

  1. loose
  2. (informal) laid-back, relaxed

Declension

Declension of labber
singular plural
masculine feminine neuter
predicative hien ass si ass et ass si si(nn)
nominative /
accusative
attributive and/or after determiner labberen labbert
independent without determiner labberes labberer
dative after any declined word labberen labberer labberen labberen
as first declined word labberem labberem