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awer

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

German Low German

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Ultimately cognate to German aber. This and the Low German cognate of German oder are conflated in some dialects, resulting in both words being used with both meanings. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.

Conjunction

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awer

  1. (Low Prussian) but
    awer öck dachte...
    but I thought...
  2. (Low Prussian) or
    fîf awer sess?
    five or six?

See also

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Hunsrik

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Etymology

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From Old High German avur, from Proto-Germanic *afar, *abar, *abur (after, following), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂epér, from *h₂epó (away, from).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈa.vəɾ/, /ˈawɐ/

Conjunction

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awer

  1. but; though
    Ich kann, awer ich will net.
    I can, but I don't want to.
    • 2008, Ursula Wiesemann, Contribuição ao desenvolvimento de uma ortografia da língua Hunsrik falada na América do Sul, SIL Brasil: Associação Internacional de Lingüística, page 30:
      awer, ap xeele, tanke, knaps – mas, descascar, agradecer, rarefeito.
      but, to peel, to thank, scarce – but, to peel, to thank, scarce
      (note: the words right of the hyphen are in Portuguese)

Further reading

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Luxembourgish

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Middle High German aver, from Old High German avur, afar. The expected form is *uewer; the a- is probably due to a levelling influence by cognate German aber, since the native forms show many variants (ower, iewer, iewel, ewel, partly through conflation with Middle High German *evenwal; compare Dutch evenwel).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈaːveʀ/, [ˈaːvɐ]

Conjunction

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awer

  1. but, however
    Ech drénke gär Téi, awer ech haasse Kaffi.I like to drink tea, but I hate coffee.

Synonyms

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Adverb

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awer

  1. (qualifier) rather; quite; unusually used with adjectives to express a surprising degree, whether this surprise be real or for effect
    Dat ass awer deier.That's rather expensive. ≈ That's more expensive than I would’ve thought.
    Du bass awer grouss ginn!Look how tall you’ve become! (said to a child)
  2. nonetheless, nevertheless

Particle

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awer

  1. used to express astonishment, a reproach; but
    Dat dauert awer laang!
    But that takes a long time!

Pennsylvania German

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Conjunction

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awer

  1. Alternative form of awwer