See also: Wester and wester-

English

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Etymology

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From west-er.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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wester (plural westers)

  1. A strong westerly wind, a wind blowing from the west.

Verb

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wester (third-person singular simple present westers, present participle westering, simple past and past participle westered)

  1. To move towards the west
    • 1927, H. P. Lovecraft, The Very Old Folk:
      The hills rose scarlet and gold to the north of the little town, and the westering sun shone ruddily and mystically on the crude new stone and plaster buildings of the dusty forum and the wooden walls of the circus some distance to the east.
    • 1936, Alfred Edward Housman, More Poems, XI, line 1-2:
      The rainy Pleiads wester,
      Orion plunges prone,

Usage notes

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  • Used especially of heavenly bodies.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Adjective

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wester (not comparable)

  1. (now dialectal) Western, westerly.
    • 1828, The Picture of Scotland, page 187:
      This is properly two, if not three towns — there being an Easter Anstruther and a Wester Anstruther, both burghs, besides a large fishing village []
    • 1885, Alex Johnston Warden, Angus Or Forfarshire: The Land and People, Descriptive and Historical, page 204:
      There had been a Little and a Meikle, and an Easter and a Wester Coull two centuries ago; and there had been a castle on the property []
    • 1887, Walter Wood, The East Neuk of Fife: Its History and Antiquities, page 118:
      It is styled, as we have seen, Wester Rires, which implies an Easter Rires; and this last portion of it probably lay to the north-east, and included  []
    • 2011, J.I.M. Stewart, Mungo's Dream, House of Stratus, →ISBN, page 219:
      'The fact remains that there is an Easter Fintry and a Wester Fintry in this part of the world. Just as there is an Easter Golford and a Wester Golford, ...
  2. comparative form of west: more west
    • 1969 January 6, Bertram L. Podell, Congressional Record, United States, page 276:
      President-elect Nixon [...] pointed out that Alaska is even wester than Hawaii. [...] had Mr. Nixon searched just a few leagues wester our Secretary of the Interior might have turned out to be a citizen of Kichighinsk. Nor is there anything in the history of the United States that validates the presupposition that anyone who is wester than anybody is simultaneously and necessatily more interior than anybody.

Derived terms

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References

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Anagrams

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