释义 |
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: öre /ˈørə/ n ( pl öre)- a Scandinavian monetary unit worth one hundredth of a Swedish krona and (øre) one hundredth of a Danish and Norwegian krone
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024ore /ɔr/USA pronunciation n. - Mineralogya metal-bearing mineral that can be mined at a profit, or a mineral or natural product serving as a source of some nonmetallic substance, as sulfur: [uncountable]searching for iron ore.[countable]different ores.
Ore., an abbreviation of:- Place NamesOregon.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024ore (ôr, ōr),USA pronunciation n. - Mineralogya metal-bearing mineral or rock, or a native metal, that can be mined at a profit.
- Mineralogya mineral or natural product serving as a source of some nonmetallic substance, as sulfur.
- bef. 900; conflation of Middle English ore, Old English ōra ore, unreduced metal; and Middle English or(e) ore, metal, Old English ār brass, cognate with Old Saxon, Old High German ēr, Old Norse eir, Gothic aiz; compare Latin aes bronze, coin, money
ö•re (œ′rə),USA pronunciation n., pl. ö•re. - Currencya bronze coin of Norway, the 100th part of a krone.
- a zinc or bronze coin of Denmark, the 100th part of a krone.
- Currencya bronze coin of Sweden, the 100th part of a krona.
- a fractional currency of the Faeroe Islands, the 100th part of a krona.
Also, ø•re ( œ′rə) (for defs. 1, 2). - Latin aureus a gold coin
- 1600–10
Ore., - Place NamesOregon.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers:: ore /ɔː/ n - any naturally occurring mineral or aggregate of minerals from which economically important constituents, esp metals, can be extracted
Etymology: Old English ār, ōra; related to Gothic aiz, Latin aes, Dutch oer |