/ˈθero̝/, /ˈsero̝/
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese cerro, from Latin cirrus (“curl”).
- masculinehill, hillock
- masculinedorsal fin
- in-plural, masculinehard scales along the sides of the Atlantic horse mackerel
- masculineyarn of clean flax; strick
“It. ....... arestre de lyno en que son viinte et seys cerros.” — It. ... plait of linen, in which there are twenty-six yarns
“Ó redor da lareira, na cuciña da casa máis chea do logar de Outeiro, xunta estaba a familia. O patrón sentado no escano cos pés fóra e por riba das zocas, quentábase, ó mesmo tempo que, cun forquito b” — The family was reunited around the hearth, in the kitchen of the fullest house of the hamlet of Outeiro. The head of the household was sitting on the bench, his feet out and on the clogs, warming whil
- masculineflax fiver
- first-person, form-of, indicative, present, singularfirst-person singular present indicative of cerrar
Formscerros(plural)