Gore: Difference between revisions
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m (Text replacement - "feces" to "fecal matter") |
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: From Middle English gore, gor, gorre (“mud, muck”), | : From Middle English gore, gor, gorre (“mud, muck”), | ||
: from Old English gor (“dirt, dung, filth, muck”), | : from Old English gor (“dirt, dung, filth, muck”), | ||
: from Proto-Germanic *gurą (“half-digested stomach contents; | : from Proto-Germanic *gurą (“half-digested stomach contents; [[fecal matter]]; manure”), | ||
: from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰer- (“hot; warm”). | : from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰer- (“hot; warm”). | ||
Latest revision as of 19:22, 7 April 2025
- From Middle English gore, gor, gorre (“mud, muck”),
- from Old English gor (“dirt, dung, filth, muck”),
- from Proto-Germanic *gurą (“half-digested stomach contents; fecal matter; manure”),
- from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰer- (“hot; warm”).
Noun
- gore (uncountable)
- Blood, especially that from a wound when thickened due to exposure to the air.
- Murder, bloodshed, violence.
- (obsolete except in dialects) Dirt; mud; filth.
Derived terms
- gory

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