ember

noun
/ˈɛm.bəː/UK/ˈɛm.bɚ/US/ˈɪm.bɚ/

Etymology

From Middle English embre, eymbre, aymer, eymere, emeri, from Old English ǣmyrġe, from Proto-West Germanic *aimuʀjā, from Proto-Germanic *aimuzjǭ, a compound of *aimaz + *uzjǭ. The latter is from Proto-Indo-European *h₁ews- (“to burn”). The b is intrusive and was added in English for ease of pronunciation when the vowel of the second syllable (y) disappeared. See also Old High German eimuria (“pyre”), Danish emmer, Swedish mörja (“embers”).

  1. derived from *h₁ews-
  2. inherited from *aimuzjǭ
  3. inherited from *aimuʀjā
  4. inherited from ǣmyrġe
  5. inherited from embre

Definitions

  1. A piece of coal or wood glowing by heat

    A piece of coal or wood glowing by heat; a hot coal.

  2. Smoldering ash.

  3. Making a circuit of the year or the seasons

    Making a circuit of the year or the seasons; recurring in each quarter of the year, as certain religious days set apart for fasting and prayer.

    • ember fasts
    • ember days
    • ember weeks
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. A unisex given name.

      • This conversation took place at an advertising agency between an American copywriter named Ember (E), and one of his Japanese co-workers named Nakada (N).
      • In this section, a straightforward and attractive character named Ember, an academic colleague of Krug, is trying to distract his friend from brooding upon the death of his wife.
      • Brigdha had hoped that she would have a chance to speak with this red headed woman, named Ember, who now approached. She seemed to also be from somewhere else. Maybe you will help me, Ember? she wondered.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for ember. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA