opara
See also: Opara
English
Etymology
Borrowing from Igbo
Noun
opara (plural opara)
- (Nigeria) The oldest son, who has inherited the rights and responsibilities of his father after his father has died.
- 1980, Umoja - Volume 4, Issue 3, page 23:
- Since the opara was the rightful successor to his father, and more or less inherited his father's political and religious functions upon his death, sending him to school, where he became ipso facto a Christian convert, meant that when his ...
- 1991, John E. Eberegbulam Njoku, Short Stories of the Traditional People of Nigeria, →ISBN:
- He summoned all the opara (the first sons) of each family in the clan.
- 2009, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, I Do Not Come to You by Chance, →ISBN:
- Many mothers would give an arm and a leg to have an opara like me.
Anagrams
Polish
Etymology
Deverbal from oparzyć.
Pronunciation
- (Greater Poland):
- (Chełmno-Dobrzyń) IPA(key): /ɔˈpa.ra/
Noun
opara f
- (Chełmno-Dobrzyń, humorous, derogatory) synonym of wódka
Further reading
- Antoni Krasnowolski (1879) “opara”, in Album uczącéj się młodzieży polskiéj poświęcone Józefowi Ignacemu Kraszewskiemu z powodu jubileuszu jego pięćdziesięcioletniéj działalności literackiéj (in Polish), Lviv: Czytelni Akademickiéj Lwowskiéj; "Gaz. Narod." J. Dobrzańskiego i K. Gromana, Słowniczek prowincjalizmów zebranych w ziemi chełmińskiej i świeckiej, page 306
- Gustaw Pobłocki (1887) “opara”, in Słownik kaszubski z dodatkiem idyotyzmów chełmińskich i kociewskich (in Polish), 2 edition, Chełmno, page 136