- Weimaraner
- noun Etymology: German, from Weimar, Germany Date: 1943 any of a breed of large light gray usually short-haired pointers of German origin
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
Weimaraner — (Kurzhaar) (mit kupiertem Schwanz) … Deutsch Wikipedia
Weimaraner — dog breed, 1943, from WEIMAR (Cf. Weimar), german city, + German suffix aner indicating of this place. Originally bred as a hunting dog in the Weimar region … Etymology dictionary
Weimaraner — [wī′mə rä΄nər, vī′mə rä΄nər] n. [< WEIMAR, where the breed was developed] [also w ] any of a breed of medium sized hunting dog with a short, smooth, gray coat and a docked tail … English World dictionary
Weimaraner — Infobox Dogbreed akcgroup = Sporting akcstd = http://www.akc.org/breeds/weimaraner/index.cfm altname = Weimaraner Vorstehhund ankcgroup = Group 3 (Gun dogs ankcstd = http://www.ankc.aust.com/weimaran.html ckcgroup = Group 1 Sporting ckcstd = http … Wikipedia
weimaraner — Raza canina desarrollada a comienzos del s. XIX por nobles alemanes de la corte de Weimar. Primero utilizada para la caza mayor, la raza se usó posteriormente como un perro de muestra y perro cobrador. El weimaraner es gracioso; tiene orejas… … Enciclopedia Universal
Weimaraner — /vuy meuh rah neuhr, wuy , wuy meuh ray /, n. one of a German breed of hunting dogs having a smooth silver gray to dark gray coat, a cropped tail, and blue gray or amber eyes. [1940 45; < G, after WEIMAR; see AN, ER1] * * * Dog breed developed in … Universalium
Weimaraner — (Cap.) Breed of dog … Bryson’s dictionary for writers and editors
Weimaraner — [ vʌɪməˌrα:nə, wʌɪ ] noun a dog of a thin coated, typically grey breed of pointer used as a gun dog. Origin 1940s: from Ger., from Weimar in Germany, where the breed was developed … English new terms dictionary
weimaraner — wei·mar·an·er … English syllables
Weimaraner — Wei•mar•an•er [[t]ˈvaɪ məˌrɑ nər, ˈwaɪ , ˈwaɪ məˌreɪ [/t]] n. dch one of a German breed of large hunting dogs with a smooth gray coat and blue gray or amber eyes • Etymology: 1940–45; < G, after Weimar; see an I, er I … From formal English to slang