over-

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See also: over, över, Över, øver, and över-

English

Etymology

From Middle English over-, from Old English ofer-, from Proto-Germanic *uber, from Proto-Indo-European *upér. Cognate with Dutch over-, German über-, Swedish över-, Welsh gor-, Spanish sobre-, Armenian վեր- (ver-), Persian ابر (abar-). Doublet of super-, sur-, and hyper-. More at over.

Pronunciation

Prefix

over-

  1. Above, or higher.
    overbar, overlook
  2. Superior.
    overlord
  3. Excessive; excessively.
    overkind, overloud, overstate
  4. Surrounding or covering.
    overcoat, overpaint
  5. (augmentative) Exceptional; extremely or intensely.

Usage notes

Comparison of relative combinations (two separate words, hyphenated or a single compound word) does not easily fit a pattern; terms become compound words as they are broadly accepted.

Synonyms

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams

Danish

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *ubar- (over-). Cognate with Dutch over-, German über-, English over-, Swedish över-. More at over.

Prefix

over-

  1. usually the same as over- in English.

See also

Dutch

Etymology

See over

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)

Prefix

over-

  1. prepended to verbs; denotes that action takes place over the object
    Hij oversproeide de planten.
    He sprayed over the plants.
  2. prepended to verbs, nouns and adjectives; denotes that the action or state takes place excessively
    De man overeet zich.
    The man overeats.

Usage notes

The second meaning is not shared by compounds with the adverb over.

Norwegian Bokmål

Prefix

over-

  1. usually the same as over- in English.

Derived terms

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Prefix

over-

  1. usually the same as over- in English.

See also