spier
See also: Spier
English
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English spier, spyer, spiar, equivalent to spy + -er. Compare Dutch verspieder and bespieder (“spier”), German Späher (“spier”). Compare also Danish spejde (“spy”), Swedish speja (“spy”).
Noun
spier (plural spiers)
- (rare) One who spies; a spy.
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Noun
spier (plural spiere)
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch spier (“pointed object; blade of grass; long pole; muscle”), from Old Dutch *spīr, from Proto-Germanic *spīraz, *spīrǭ. In Middle Dutch, the word took the meaning "muscle", likely due to the similarities in shape between its earlier meanings and muscle fibers.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /spir/, [spiːr]
Audio: (file) - Hyphenation: spier
- Rhymes: -ir
- Homophone: Spier
Noun
spier f (plural spieren, diminutive spiertje n)
- muscle (contractile tissue)
- (archaic) blade (of a plant)
- (archaic) blade of grass
- Synonyms: grasspriet, grashalm
- spar (pole)
- Synonym: rondhout
Derived terms
- armspier
- beenspier
- bilspier
- buikspier
- gespierd
- hartspier
- kringspier
- oogspier
- sluitspier
- spierversterken
- spierwit
Descendants
Noun
spier n (uncountable)
- (dated) the collective of muscles
- (obsolete) poultry, white meat, the whitish meat of fowl [16th–18th c.]