Translingual

Etymology

Clipping of English, Tagalog, and Waray-Waray Waray.

Symbol

war

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-2 & ISO 639-3 language code for Waray-Waray.

See also

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia
Part of the Stele of the Vultures depicting heavy infantry marching in formation
Part of the Bayeux Tapestry depicting Norman heavy cavalry charging Saxon shield wall
Mushroom cloud over Nagasaki
Painting of Napolean and his troops in winter retreating from Moscow
Wasteland after the attack on the German line at Flers-Coucelette
Naval warfare between the imperial Qing army and Taiping rebels
Clockwise from top left: The Stele of the Vultures showing the victory of Lagash over Umma (c. 2500 BC), the Bayeaux Tapestry showing the Battle of Hastings during the Norman Conquest of England (1066), the Retreat from Moscow during the Napoleonic Wars (1812), the Qing assault on Nanjing during the Taiping Rebellion (1864), the Battle of the Somme in WWI (1916), and the atomic bombing of Nagasaki in WWII (1945)
Washington Crossing the Delaware, Emanuel Leutze's depictions in 1851 of the Battle of Trenton during the American Revolution
Vasily Vereshchagin's Apotheosis of War (1871), part of a series depicting the Russian Empire's conquest of Central Asia
"Bloody Saturday", Wang Xiaoting's photograph of a child orphaned during the aerial bombardment of Shanghai South Railway Station in 1937 amid the Second Sino-Japanese War

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English werre, from Late Old English werre / wyrre (armed conflict), from Anglo-Norman and Old Northern French guerre / werre (compare modern French guerre), from Medieval Latin werra, from Frankish *werru (confusion; quarrel), from Proto-Indo-European *wers- (to mix up, confuse, beat, thresh). Gradually displaced native Old English beadu, hild, ġewinn, orleġe, wīġ, and many others as the general term for "war" during the Middle English period.

Related to Old High German werra (confusion, strife, quarrel) and German verwirren (to confuse), but not to Wehr (defense). Also related to Old Saxon werran (to confuse, perplex), Dutch war (confusion, disarray), West Frisian war (confusion), Old English wyrsa, wiersa (worse), Old Norse verri (worse, orig. confounded, mixed up), Italian guerra (war). There may be a connection with worse and wurst.

Pronunciation

Noun

war (countable and uncountable, plural wars)

  1. (uncountable) Organized, large-scale, armed conflict between countries or between national, ethnic, or other sizeable groups, usually but not always involving active engagement of military forces.
    • 1611, The Holy Bible, [] (King James Version), London: [] Robert Barker, [], →OCLC, Exodus 1:10:
      Come on, let vs deale wisely with them, lest they multiply, and it come to passe that when there falleth out any warre, they ioyne also vnto our enemies, and fight against vs, and so get them vp out of the land.
    • 1611, The Holy Bible, [] (King James Version), London: [] Robert Barker, [], →OCLC, Mark 13:7:
      And when yee shall heare of warres, and rumors of warres, be yee not troubled: For such things must needs be, but the end shall not be yet.
    • 1854, Prince George, letter to his wife from Crimea:
      War is indeed a fearful thing and the more I see it the more dreadful it appears.
    • 1864 Sept. 12, William Tecumseh Sherman, letter to the mayor of Atlanta & al.:
      You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I will. War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it; and those who brought war into our Country deserve all the curses and maledictions a people can pour out... You might as well appeal against the thunder-storm as against these terrible hardships of war.
    • 1879 June 19, William Tecumseh Sherman, speech to the Michigan Military Academy:
      I've been where you are now and I know just how you feel. It's entirely natural that there should beat in the breast of every one of you a hope and desire that some day you can use the skill you have acquired here. Suppress it! You don't know the horrible aspects of war. I've been through two wars and I know. I've seen cities and homes in ashes. I've seen thousands of men lying on the ground, their dead faces looking up at the skies. I tell you, war is hell!
    • 1907, Edward Porter Alexander, Military Memoirs of a Confederate, page 302:
      Here Lee and Longstreet stood during most of the fighting [at Fredericksburg], and it is told that, on one of the Federal repulses from Marye's Hill, Lee put his hand upon Longstreet's arm and said, "It is well that war is so terrible, or we would grow too fond of it."
    • 1922, Henry Ford, Samuel Crowther, chapter 17, in My Life and Work, Garden City, New York: Garden City Publishing Company, Inc., →OCLC:
      Nobody can deny that war is a profitable business for those who like that kind of money. War is an orgy of money, just as it is an orgy of blood.
    • 1935, Smedley Butler, War Is a Racket, page 1 & 7:
      War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives... Of course, it isn't put that crudely in war time. It is dressed into speeches about patriotism, love of country, and "we must all put our shoulders to the wheel," but the profits jump and leap and skyrocket—and are safely pocketed.
    • 1941, George Orwell, The Lion and the Unicorn, Pt. III:
      War is the greatest of all agents of change. It speeds up all processes, wipes out minor distinctions, brings realities to the surface. Above all, war brings it home to the individual that he is not altogether an individual.
    • 1944 June 27, Herbert Hoover, speech to the Republican National Convention:
      Older men declare war. But it is the youth that must fight and die.
    • 1949 June 8, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter 1, in Nineteen Eighty-Four: A Novel, London: Secker & Warburg, →OCLC; republished [Australia]: Project Gutenberg of Australia, August 2001, part 1, page 7:
      From where Winston stood it was just possible to read, picked out on its white face in elegant lettering, the three slogans of the Party:
      WAR IS PEACE
      FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
      IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
    • 1969, “War”, in Norman Whitfield, Barrett Strong (lyrics), War & Peace, performed by Edwin Starr:
      War, huh, Good God, y'all!
      What is it good for?
      Absolutely nothing...
    • 1997, Ron Perlman, Fallout:
      War. War never changes. The Romans waged war to gather slaves and wealth. Spain built an empire from its lust for gold and territory. Hitler shaped a battered Germany into an economic superpower. But war never changes.
    • 2013 July 20, "Old Soldiers?", The Economist, Vol. 408, No. 8845:
      Edward Wilson, the inventor of the field of sociobiology, once wrote that "war is embedded in our very nature". This is a belief commonly held not just by sociobiologists but also by anthropologists and other students of human behaviour. They base it not only on the propensity of modern man to go to war with his neighbours (and, indeed, with people halfway around the world, given the chance) but also on observations of the way those who still live a pre-agricultural "hunter-gatherer" life behave... Whether modern, industrial man is less or more warlike than his hunter-gatherer ancestors is impossible to determine... One thing that is true, though, is that murder rates have fallen over the centuries... Modern society may not have done anything about war. But peace is a lot more peaceful.
    • 2025 September 15, Jennifer Kavanagh, “Here’s How Trump Can Prevent a War Over Taiwan”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 15 September 2025, Opinion‎[2]:
      China and the United States are closer than they’ve ever been to a war over Taiwan.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:war.
  2. (countable) A particular conflict of this kind.
    • 1865, Herman Melville, The Surrender at Appomattox:
      All human tribes glad token see
      In the close of the wars of Grant and Lee.
    • 1999 Nov. 8, Bill Clinton, speech at Georgetown University:
      A second challenge will be to implement, with our allies, a plan of stability in the Balkans, so that the region's bitter ethnic problems can no longer be exploited by dictators and Americans do not have to cross the Atlantic again to fight in another war.
  3. (countable, sometimes proscribed) Protracted armed conflict against irregular forces, particularly groups considered terrorists.
  4. (countable, by extension) Any protracted conflict, particularly
    1. (chiefly US) A sustained campaign against a social problem, idea, set of values, etc.
      • 1906, William James, The Moral Equivalent of War:
        The war against war is going to be no holiday excursion or camping party... Ask all our millions, north and south, whether they would vote now (were such a thing possible) to have our war for the Union expunged from history... and probably hardly a handful of eccentrics would say yes. Those ancestors, those efforts, those memories and legends, ar the most ideal part of what we now own together, a sacred spiritual possession worth more than all the blood poured out. Yet ask those same people whether they would be willing, in cold blood, to start another civil war now to gain another similar possession, and not one man or woman would vote for the proposition.
    • 2025 October 2, William Davies, “A critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0”, in The Guardian[3]:
      Trump’s lying is no less constant or blatant than in 2016, but by now it feels familiar, already priced in. What more is there to say about the “war on truth” a decade into Trump’s political career?
    1. (business) A protracted instance of fierce competition in trade.
    2. (crime) A prolonged conflict between two groups of organized criminals, usually over organizational or territorial control.
    3. (Internet) An argument between two or more people with opposing opinions on a topic or issue.
  5. (obsolete, uncountable) An assembly of weapons; instruments of war.
  6. (obsolete) Armed forces.
    • 1667, John Milton, “Book X”, in Paradise Lost. [], London: [] [Samuel Simmons], and are to be sold by Peter Parker []; [a]nd by Robert Boulter []; [a]nd Matthias Walker, [], →OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books: [], London: Basil Montagu Pickering [], 1873, →OCLC:
      On thir imbattelld ranks the Waves return,
      And overwhelm thir Warr
  7. (uncountable, card games) Any of a family of card games where all cards are dealt at the beginning of play and players attempt to capture them all, typically involving no skill and only serving to kill time.
    • 2004, Karen Salyer McElmurray, Strange Birds in the Tree of Heaven:
      We played crazy eights, war, fifty-two card pickup. Rudy flipped the whole deck across the table at me and the cards sailed to the floor, kings, queens, deuces.

Antonyms

Hyponyms

Derived terms

Translations

The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

See also

Verb

war (third-person singular simple present wars, present participle warring, simple past and past participle warred)

  1. (intransitive) To engage in conflict (may be followed by "with" to specify the foe).
    • 1595, Samuel Daniel, The First Four Books of the Civil Wars:
      ...to war the Scot, and borders to defend...
    • 1611, King James Bible, Book of Numbers, 31:7:
      And they warred against the Midianites, as the Lord commanded Moses, and they slew all the males
    • 1599 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Life of Henry the Fift”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [] (First Folio), London: [] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene i], page 77:
      Once more vnto the Breach,
      Deare friends, once more...
      Be Coppy now to men of groſſer blood,
      And teach them how to Warre.
    • 1882, George Bernard Shaw, chapter 14, in Cashel Byron's Profession:
      This vein of reflection, warring with his inner knowledge that he had been driven by fear and hatred . . ., produced an exhausting whirl in his thoughts.
    • 1973, Stevie Wonder, “Higher Ground”, in Innervisions:
      People keep on learning
      Soldiers keep on warring
      World keep on turning
      'Cause it won't be too long
    • 1979 April 28, Gerry McNamara, “Life for Art's Sake”, in Gay Community News, page 11:
      In a paradox, language wars against the world.
  2. (transitive) To carry on, as a contest; to wage.

Synonyms

Translations

Anagrams

Ambonese Malay

Etymology

Unknown. Perhaps from Dutch vermogen or Portuguese saber.

Verb

war

  1. to be able to, can
    Beta war kami iskola dia pung ana sampe masu kaskola tinggi.
    I am able to send their children to our high school.

References

  • D. Takaria, C. Pieter (1998), Kamus Bahasa Melayu Ambon-Indonesia[4], Pusat Pembinaan dan Pengembangan Bahasa

Breton

Etymology

    From Middle Breton oar, from Old Breton guar, from Proto-Brythonic *war, from Proto-Celtic *uɸer. Cognate to Welsh ar (on), Irish ar (on, upon), and Scottish Gaelic air (on, upon).

    Preposition

    war

    1. on, over
      War ar sizhun.During the week.
      War an doal emañ ar bara.The bread is on the table. (right now)
      War an doal e vez ar bara.The bread is on the table. (usually)

    Inflection

    Derived terms

    Chuukese

    Verb

    war

    1. to arrive

    Cornish

    Etymology

      From Proto-Brythonic *gwor, from Proto-Celtic *uɸer.

      Preposition

      war

      1. on, upon

      Inflection

      Inflection of war
      singular plural
      1st person warnav warnan
      2nd person warnas warnowgh
      3rd person m warnodho warnedha
      f warnedhi


      Dusner

      Noun

      war

      1. (fresh) water

      References

      • D. C. Kamholz, Austronesians in Papua (2014, Berkeley)

      Dutch

      Etymology

      From Middle Dutch werre, warre (confusion, disarray, conflict), from Old Dutch *werra, from Proto-West Germanic *werru (confusion; quarrel).

      Pronunciation

      Noun

      war f (plural warren, diminutive warretje n)

      1. confusion, disarray
        • 2016 March 15, Josien Wolthuizen, Hanneloes Pen, “Man doodgestoken in fietsenwinkel Nieuw-West”, in Het Parool:
          Volgens een bovenbuurvrouw kwamen hulpdiensten rond 12 uur 's middags naar de fietsenwinkel. "Ik had geen idee wat er aan de hand was. Maar de zoon van de eigenaar kwam eraan en was helemaal in de war. (...)"
          (please add an English translation of this quotation)
      2. tangle, mess
        • 2016 January 29, “Wist je dat papierklemmen je leven veel gemakkelijker kunnen maken?”, in Het Laatste Nieuws:
          Van statief voor je smartphone tot instrument om oortjes uit de war te houden, tot zelfs een portefeuille. De mogelijkheden met papierklemmen zijn eindeloos, maar de Japanner Venlee geeft je alvast 15 lifehacks.
          (please add an English translation of this quotation)
      3. an elevated area on the floor of a body of water, a kind of contraption for luring and catching fish, where nets and fykes could be installed
        • 1949, G. Karsten, “Eenvorme, Informe, Yefforme”, in De Speelwagen, 10, no. 4: 307:
          Welnu, deze stoepen of warren bevonden zich aan de walkant en niet midden in het water.
          (please add an English translation of this quotation)
        • 1667, Handtvesten, privilegien, willekeuren ende ordonnantien der Stadt Enchuysen, page 345:
          De Schutters van de respective Steden, werden geauctoriseert, alle de Fuycken, buyten de benoemde Warren in de Wateringh staende, te mogen visiteren, of de selve keur mogen houden ofte niet, (...)
          (please add an English translation of this quotation)

      Quotations

      Request for quotations This entry needs quotations to illustrate usage. If you come across any interesting, durably archived quotes, then please add them!

      Derived terms

      Elfdalian

      Etymology

      From Old Norse hvar, from Proto-Germanic *hwar. Cognate with Swedish var.

      Adverb

      war

      1. where, in what place

      German

      Etymology

      Cognate with Low German weer.

      Pronunciation

      Verb

      war

      1. first-person singular preterite of sein: was
        • 1788, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Egmont[5], archived from the original on 26 September 2009, (English translation):
          Ich hätte ihn heiraten können, und glaube, ich war nie in ihn verliebt.
          I could have married him; yet I believe I was never really in love with him.
      2. third-person singular preterite of sein: was

      Low German

      Adjective

      war

      1. (in some dialects) alternative form of wahr (true)

      Luxembourgish

      Alternative forms

      Pronunciation

      • IPA(key): /vaːr/, [vaː], [vaːʀ]

      Verb

      war

      1. first-person singular preterite indicative of sinn
      2. third-person singular preterite indicative of sinn

      Middle English

      Etymology 1

      Noun

      war

      1. alternative form of werre (war)

      Etymology 2

      Adjective

      war

      1. alternative form of werre (worse)

      Adverb

      war

      1. alternative form of werre (worse)

      Noun

      war

      1. alternative form of werre (worse)

      Mokilese

      Noun

      war

      1. canoe
      2. (by extension) vehicle

      Inflection

      Forms of war
      singular plural
      demonstrative forms
      1st person
      (near speaker)
      warre warkai
      2nd person
      (near hearer)
      warren warken
      3rd person
      (near neither speaker nor hearer)
      warro warrok
      article forms
      indefinite warpas warpwi
      definite warwa warkoa
      Possessive forms of war (loose inalienable possession, -ah stem)
      singular
      possessor
      first person woaroai
      second person woaroamw
      third person warah
      dual
      possessors
      first person inclusive warasa
      first person exclusive warama
      second person waramwa
      third person warara
      plural
      possessors
      first person inclusive warasai
      first person exclusive waramai
      second person waramwai
      third person wararai
      remote plural
      possessors
      first person inclusive warahs
      first person exclusive weremi
      second person weremwi
      third person warahr
      construct form weren

      Mpur

      Noun

      war

      1. water

      References

      • A Sketch of Mpur, in Languages of the Eastern Bird's Head (2002)

      Northern Kurdish

      Etymology 1

      Noun

      war m

      1. place, realm
      2. camp, camping ground
      3. area where nomads pitch their tents
      Alternative forms

      Etymology 2

      Noun

      war m

      1. respect, regard

      Old Dutch

      Etymology

      From Proto-West Germanic *wār, from Proto-Germanic *wēraz.

      Adjective

      wār

      1. true

      Inflection

      Descendants

      References

      • wār (I)”, in Oudnederlands Woordenboek, 2012

      Old English

      Etymology

      From Proto-West Germanic *wair, related to *wīraz.

      Pronunciation

      Noun

      wār n

      1. seaweed
      2. sand

      Descendants

      References

      Old Gutnish

      Etymology

      From Proto-Norse ᚹᚨᛊ (was), from Proto-Germanic *was, first/third-person singular indicative past of *wesaną.

      Verb

      war

      1. first/third-person singular indicative past of wara

      Old High German

      Etymology

        From Proto-West Germanic *wār, from Proto-Germanic *wēraz, whence also Old English wǣr, Old Norse værr.

        Adjective

        wār

        1. true

        Derived terms

        Descendants

        Old Polish

        Etymology

        Inherited from Proto-Slavic *vȃrъ (boiling; boiling liquid). By surface analysis, deverbal from wrzeć / warzyć. First attested in 1499.

        Pronunciation

        • IPA(key): (10th–15th CE) /vaːr/
        • IPA(key): (15th CE) /vɒr/

        Noun

        war m animacy unattested

        1. boiling water
          • 1874 [1499], Monumenta Medii Aevi Historica res gestas Poloniae illustrantia. Pomniki Dziejowe Wieków Średnich do objaśnienia rzeczy polskich służące[6], volume XVIII, page 622:
            Tako ony rzeczy parzyl od syebye, yako pssy z kuchnyey parzą varem
            [Tako ony rzeczy parzył od siebie, jako psy z kuchniej parzą warem]
        2. batch of a beer
          • 1856-1870 [1499], Antoni Zygmunt Helcel, editor, Starodawne Prawa Polskiego Pomniki[7], volume IX, number 1251:
            Post sex annos debet... Stanislao... per sexagenam soluere de censv et eciam per tenam siliqui a qualibet ceruisia al. warv
            [Post sex annos debet... Stanislao... per sexagenam soluere de censv et eciam per tenam siliqui a qualibet ceruisia al. waru]

        Descendants

        References

        • B. Sieradzka-Baziur, Ewa Deptuchowa, Joanna Duska, Mariusz Frodyma, Beata Hejmo, Dorota Janeczko, Katarzyna Jasińska, Krystyna Kajtoch, Joanna Kozioł, Marian Kucała, Dorota Mika, Gabriela Niemiec, Urszula Poprawska, Elżbieta Supranowicz, Ludwika Szelachowska-Winiarzowa, Zofia Wanicowa, Piotr Szpor, Bartłomiej Borek, editors (2011–2015), “war”, in Słownik pojęciowy języka staropolskiego [Conceptual Dictionary of Old Polish] (in Polish), Kraków: IJP PAN, →ISBN

        Old Saxon

        Etymology

        From Proto-West Germanic *wār, from Proto-Germanic *wēraz, from Proto-Indo-European *weh₁ros.

        Adjective

        wār

        1. true

        Declension

        Positive forms of wār
        Strong declension
        singular plural
        masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
        nominative wār wār wār wāre, wāra wāra wār, wāra
        accusative wāran, wāren wāra wār wāra, wāre wāra wār, wāra
        genitive wāres, wāras wārara, wāraro wāres, wāras wāraro, wāroro, wārero wāraro, wāroro, wārero wāraro, wāroro, wārero
        dative wārumu, wārum, wārun, wārun, wāron, wāren, wāran wāraro, wāraru, wārara wārumu, wārum, wārun, wārun, wāron, wāren, wāran wārun, wāron, wārum wārun, wāron wārun, wāron, wārum
        Weak declension
        singular plural
        masculine feminine neuter masculine feminine neuter
        nominative wāro, wāra wāra, wāre wāra, wāre wāron, wārun wāron, wārun, wāran wāron, wārun
        accusative wāron, wāran wārun, wāron, wāran wāra, wāre wāron, wārun wāron, wārun, wāran wāron, wārun
        genitive wāren, wāran wārun, wāran, wāren wāren, wāran wārono, wāreno wārono wārono, wāreno
        dative wāron, wāren, wāran wārun, wāran wāron, wāren, wāran wāron, wārun wāron, wārun wāron, wārun

        Polish

        Polish Wikipedia has an article on:
        Wikipedia pl

        Pronunciation

        Etymology 1

        Inherited from Old Polish war. By surface analysis, deverbal from warzyć.

        Noun

        war m inan

        1. (obsolete) boiling water or other liquid
          Synonyms: wrzątek, ukrop, kipiatok
        Declension

        Etymology 2

        Inherited from Proto-Slavic *vȃrъ (heat).

        Noun

        war m inan

        1. (obsolete, dialectal) extreme heat
          Synonyms: upał, gorąc, skwar, spiekota
        Declension

        Etymology 3

        Borrowed from English var.

        Noun

        war m inan

        1. (physics) var, volt-ampere reactive (unit of electrical power)
        Declension

        Further reading

        • war in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
        • war in Polish dictionaries at PWN

        Scots

        Etymology 1

        From Middle English were, weren, from Old English wǣre, wǣron, wǣren, from Proto-Germanic *wēz-, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂wes-.

        Verb

        war

        1. first/second/third-person plural simple past indicative of be; were

        Etymology 2

        From Middle English werre.

        Noun

        war (plural wars)

        1. war
        Alternative forms

        References

        Somali

        Noun

        war ?

        1. news
          Wax war miyaa hey-sa?Do you have some news?

        Tocharian B

        Etymology

        From Proto-Tocharian *wär (whence Tocharian A wär), from Proto-Indo-European *wódr̥ (water) through a regular (endocentric) thematicization via *udrom.

        Noun

        war ?

        1. water

        See also

        • āp (body of water, river, flood)

        Yola

        Alternative forms

        Etymology

        From Middle English ware, from Old English wǣre.

        Pronunciation

        Verb

        war

        1. were
          • 1867, GLOSSARY OF THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY, page 32:
            A war cowdealeen wi ooree.
            They were scolding with one another.
          • 1867, “VERSES IN ANSWER TO THE WEDDEEN O BALLYMORE”, in SONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY, page 98:
            Trippeathès an brand-eyrons war ee-brougkt to a big breal.
            [Trippets and brandirons were brought to the large fire.]
          • 1867, “VERSES IN ANSWER TO THE WEDDEEN O BALLYMORE”, in SONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY, page 98:
            Baakhooses an lauckès war aul ee a zweal.
            [Ovens and locks were all in the swale.]
          • 1867, “VERSES IN ANSWER TO THE WEDDEEN O BALLYMORE”, in SONGS, ETC. IN THE DIALECT OF FORTH AND BARGY, page 98:
            Tibbès an crockès wee drink war ee-felt.
            [Tubs and crocks were filled with drink.]

        References

        • Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828), William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867, page 32

        Zazaki

        Etymology

        From Proto-Indo-European *swésōr.

        Pronunciation

        • IPA(key): /waɾ/
        • Hyphenation: war

        Noun

        war f

        1. sister
          Synonyms: wa, ware, waye, wae