Ur-

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Ur- is a German prefix meaning "prot(o)-", "first", "oldest", "original" when used with a noun. In combination with an adjective, it can be translated as the intensifier "very".

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Note that not all German nouns starting with Ur- follow this pattern, for instance, Urlaub (vacation, holiday), Urteil (verdict), or Urin (urine) have different etymologies and altogether different meanings.

There is also an adjective uralt ("very old") that has existed for a long time. Recently, however, the prefix ur- has been used productively, especially by young speakers from eastern Austria, to create countless neologisms. New words include the colloquialisms urfad ("very boring") and urgeil and urcool (both meaning "super", "very nice").

It is also used with names for relatives where great is used in English, e.g. Urgroßmutter ("Great Grandmother") and Urenkel ("Great Grandson"). As in English, this is repeated for the next generation back or forward: Ururgroßvater ("Great Great Grandfather").

In English when combined with another noun, usually retaining the hyphen, it has a similar meaning to that in German. A well-known example is ur-Hamlet, used by literary scholars to denote an anonymously authored lost play of the 16th century, the story of which was adapted by Shakespeare for the plot of his play The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. In dravidian languages, ur has similar meaning- oru means one.oruma=unity, orma=memory, or=(verb)remember,recollect ur=place,village,locality(a similar meaning is there in many other languages spread over the world)'ur'iyuka=(verb)=peel off,uncover,undress . -but the real catch is with the verb"uruthiriyuka"in Malayalam.thiriyuka=(verb)turn,rotate,revolve etc."uruthiriyuka"means evolve,develop on it's own,take a shape etc(uru has two meanings-fertile bull,cruise vessel-probably not related with this context )

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