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soler

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Soler and sôler

English

Etymology

From sole + -er.

Noun

soler (plural solers)

  1. One who fits the soles to shoes.
    • 1890, John Martine, Reminiscences and Notices of Fourteen Parishes of the County of Haddington, page 88:
      He was a great mender and soler of shoes, and even could make new ones very strong and coarse.

Anagrams

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Asturian

Verb

soler

  1. to usually...(do something); to tend to

Catalan

Etymology 1

From sòl + -er.

Pronunciation

Noun

soler m (plural solers)

  1. ground floor

Etymology 2

Inherited from Latin solēre.

Pronunciation

Verb

soler (first-person singular present solc, no first-person singular preterite, no past participle); root stress: (Central, Valencia, Balearic) /ɔ/

  1. (auxiliary) to usually..., to be accustomed to..., to have the habit of...
    solen fer la passejadathey usually go for a walk
  2. (auxiliary) to frequently..., to often...
    al vespre sol fer frescait usually gets cool in the evening
  3. (auxiliary, in the imperfect tense) used to
    solia venir cada dijoushe/she used to come every Thursday
Conjugation

Further reading

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Danish

Noun

soler c

  1. indefinite plural of sol

Verb

soler

  1. present of sole

Ladino

Latin

Norwegian Bokmål

Norwegian Nynorsk

Old English

Old French

Old Spanish

Spanish

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