See also: Stair

English

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 Stair on Wikipedia
 
Stair in Opéra Garnier (Paris)
 
Stair of a building in Bucharest (Romania)

Etymology

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From Middle English steire, staire, stayre, stayer, steir, steyre, steyer, from Old English stǣġer (stair, staircase), from Proto-West Germanic *staigri, from Proto-Germanic *staigriz (stairs, scaffolding), from Proto-Indo-European *steygʰ- (to walk, proceed, march, climb).

Cognate with Dutch steiger (a stair, step, wharf, pier, scaffolding), Middle Low German steiger, steir (scaffolding), German Low German Steiger (a scaffold; trestle). Related to Old English āstǣġan (to ascend, go up, embark), Old English stīġan (to go, move, reach; ascend, mount, go up, spring up, rise; scale), German Stiege (a flight of stairs). More at sty.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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stair (plural stairs)

  1. A single step in a staircase.
    Synonym: step
  2. A series of steps; a staircase.
    • 1899, Hughes Mearns, Antigonish:
      Yesterday, upon the stair / I met a man who wasn’t there / He wasn’t there again today / I wish, I wish he’d go away …

Usage notes

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  • Stairs and stair are used to refer to a single staircase, mostly interchangeably in the UK.

Synonyms

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Derived terms

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Terms derived from stair (noun)

Translations

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See also

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Anagrams

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Irish

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Etymology

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From Old Irish stoir, from Latin historia, from Ancient Greek ἱστορίᾱ (historíā). Doublet of stór.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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stair f (genitive singular staire, nominative plural startha)

  1. history
  2. account, story
  3. (literary) repute, fame

Declension

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Declension of stair (second declension)
bare forms
case singular plural
nominative stair startha
vocative a stair a startha
genitive staire startha
dative stair startha
forms with the definite article
case singular plural
nominative an stair na startha
genitive na staire na startha
dative leis an stair
don stair
leis na startha

Derived terms

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Further reading

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