boor

Etymology
Borrowed from. .

Noun

 * 1) A peasant.
 * 2) A Boer, white South African of Dutch or Huguenot descent.
 * 3) A yokel, country bumpkin.
 * 4) An uncultured person.
 * 5) * 1905, Edmund Selous, The Bird Watcher in the Shetlands, p. 107 :
 * I question if any man ever saw his absent friend more clearly than did Shakespeare his Falstaff, for instance, or Scott his Balfour of Burleigh. But does it, therefore, follow that either of these great writers would, when hungry, have summoned up before him a clearer picture of his approaching dinner, than does the equally hungry or very much hungrier boor? This I doubt; and on the same principle I doubt if the said boor would see his dinner more clearly than a wolf, bear, or tiger would theirs when in quest of it.
 * I question if any man ever saw his absent friend more clearly than did Shakespeare his Falstaff, for instance, or Scott his Balfour of Burleigh. But does it, therefore, follow that either of these great writers would, when hungry, have summoned up before him a clearer picture of his approaching dinner, than does the equally hungry or very much hungrier boor? This I doubt; and on the same principle I doubt if the said boor would see his dinner more clearly than a wolf, bear, or tiger would theirs when in quest of it.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Dutch:
 * French:
 * Italian:, , , ,
 * Romanian:
 * Spanish:
 * Turkish:


 * Bulgarian: бур
 * Esperanto: buro
 * Italian:
 * Polish:


 * Czech:
 * French:
 * Greek:
 * Romanian:, ,
 * Spanish: paleto


 * Bulgarian:
 * Czech:, ,
 * Finnish: ,
 * French:, , , ,
 * Galician: pailán, pailaroco,, , , badoco
 * Greek:
 * Irish: abhlóir, amhlán
 * Italian:
 * Latin: rupex
 * Ottoman Turkish: هودوك, چوبان
 * Persian: ارنئوت
 * Polish: ,
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian: ,
 * Russian:, , , ,
 * Spanish:, , paleto
 * Swedish:, bonnläpp
 * Turkish: ,
 * Volapük:,  higrobälan,  jigrobälan

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) port, harbour

Etymology 1
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) drill

Etymology 2
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) boron

Etymology 3
From.

Verb

 * 1) to drill

Etymology 1
From.

Noun

 * 1) drill

Etymology 2
Dutchification of.

Noun

 * 1) boron

Noun

 * 1) boron

Noun

 * 1) goat

Etymology
From, from , from.

Adjective

 * 1) poor