An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/sehr

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An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, S (1891)
by Friedrich Kluge, translated by John Francis Davis
sehr
Friedrich Kluge2509960An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, S — sehr1891John Francis Davis

sehr, adv., ‘very greatly, very much’ (unknown to Suab. and Bav., arg, recht, gar being used), from MidHG. sêre, sêr, adv., ‘with pain, painfully, powerfully, very’; OHG. and OSax. sêro, ‘painfully, with difficulty, violently’; adv. form of OHG. and OSax. ser, ‘painfully,’ AS. sâr, adj., ‘painful, wounding.’ Allied to the substs. Goth. sair, AS. sâr, ‘pain’ (E. sore), OSax. sêr, OHG. and MidHG. sêr, n., ‘pain’; from the OTeut. adj. is derived Finn. sairas, ‘sick.’ The common Teut. saira- seems, like OIr. sáeth, sóeth, ‘hurt, disease,’ to point to a root sai, ‘to pain.’ The earlier meaning is preserved by Suab. and Bav. sêr, ‘wounded, painful,’ and versehren, ‘to wound’; comp. Du. zeer, ‘injured, injury, sickness, scab.’