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ADDER

 - 8 dictionary results

ad⋅der

1[ad-er]
–noun
1. the common European viper, Vipera berus.
2. any of various other venomous or harmless snakes resembling the viper.

Origin:
bef. 950; late ME; r. ME nadder (a nadder becoming an adder by misdivision; cf. apron ), OE næddre; c. OS nādra, OHG nātara (G Natter), ON nathra snake, Goth nadrs adder, OIr nathir snake, L natrix water snake

add⋅er

2[ad-er]
–noun
a person or thing that adds.

Origin:
1570–80; add + -er 1
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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add·er 1   (ād'ər)   
n.  One that adds, especially a computational device that performs arithmetic addition.
ad·der 2   (ād'ər)   
n.  
  1. See viper.

  2. Any of several nonvenomous snakes, such as the milk snake of North America, popularly believed to be harmful.


[Middle English, from an addre, alteration of a naddre, a snake, from Old English nǣdre, snake.]
Word History: The biblical injunction to be wise as serpents and innocent as doves looks somewhat alien in the Middle English guise "Loke ye be prudent as neddris and symple as dowves." Neddris, which is perhaps the strangest-looking word in this Middle English passage, would be adders in Modern English, with a different meaning and form. Adder, an example of specialization in meaning, no longer refers to just any serpent or snake, as it once did, but now denotes only specific kinds of snakes. Adder also illustrates a process known as false splitting, or juncture loss: the word came from Old English nǣdre and kept its n into the Middle English period, but later during that stage of the language people started analyzing the phrase a naddre as an addre—the false splitting that has given us adder.
vi·per   (vī'pər)   
n.  
  1. Any of several venomous Old World snakes of the family Viperidae, having a single pair of long, hollow fangs and a thick, heavy body. Also called adder2.

  2. A pit viper.

  3. A venomous or supposedly venomous snake.

  4. A person regarded as malicious or treacherous.


[Middle English vipere, from Old French, from Latin vīpera, snake, contraction of *vīvipera : vīvus, alive; see gwei- in Indo-European roots + parere, to give birth; see perə-1 in Indo-European roots.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

adder 
O.E. næddre "a snake," from W.Gmc. *nædro "a snake" (cf. O.N. naðra, M.Du. nadre, Ger. Natter, Goth. nadrs), from PIE base *netr- (cf. L. natrix "water snake," probably by folk-association with nare "to swim;" O.Ir. nathir, Welsh neidr "adder"). The modern form represents a faulty separation 14c.-16c. into an adder, for which see also apron, auger, nickname, humble pie, umpire. Nedder is still a northern Eng. dialect form. Folklore connection with deafness is via Psalm lviii.1-5. The adder is said to stop up its ears to avoid hearing the snaker charmer called in to drive it away, though whether this tradition can account for the O.T. reference I cannot say. Adder-bolt (1483) was a former name for "dragonfly."
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Medical Dictionary

Main Entry: ad·der
Pronunciation: 'ad-&r
Function: noun
1 : the common venomous European viper of the genus Vipera (V.berus); broadly : a terrestrial viper of the family Viperidae
2 : any of several No. American snakes (as the hognose snakes) that are harmless but are popularlybelieved to be venomous
Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary, © 2002 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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Bible Dictionary

Adder

(Ps. 140:3; Rom. 3:13, "asp") is the rendering of, (1.) Akshub ("coiling" or "lying in wait"), properly an asp or viper, found only in this passage. (2.) Pethen ("twisting"), a viper or venomous serpent identified with the cobra (Naja haje) (Ps. 58:4; 91:13); elsewhere "asp." (3.) Tziphoni ("hissing") (Prov. 23:32); elsewhere rendered "cockatrice," Isa. 11:8; 14:29; 59:5; Jer. 8:17, as it is here in the margin of the Authorized Version. The Revised Version has "basilisk." This may have been the yellow viper, the Daboia xanthina, the largest and most dangerous of the vipers of Palestine. (4.) Shephiphon ("creeping"), occurring only in Gen. 49:17, the small speckled venomous snake, the "horned snake," or cerastes. Dan is compared to this serpent, which springs from its hiding-place on the passer-by.

Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary
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