March 23, 2006, 20:36
KallehLeery
I would think the adjective for
leer would be just that, an adjective. Yet they really mean 2 very different things. There is absolutely no sexual insinuation with
leery, while there is for
leer.
Any idea why the adjective isn't similar to the noun or intransitive verb?
March 24, 2006, 00:16
Erik JohansenWell as a lorry driver we were taught to leer as part of the driving course!
I assume the two words have different origins perhaps. Leery to me always suggests a very particular feeling that other word fits so well!
March 24, 2006, 02:26
arnieThe
Online Etymology Dictionary gives:
quote:
"untrusting, suspicious," 1718, originally slang, probably from dialectal lere "learning, knowledge" (see lore), or from leer (v.) in some now-obscure sense.
My personal reaction is that their first suggestion is right, and there is no connection with
leer.
March 24, 2006, 05:49
zmježdThe online Compact OED suggests that the two words are related.
To leer originally meant
to look askance or sideways. Not much of a stretch there.
To be cautious or wary could be related to
looking.
March 24, 2006, 13:27
<Asa Lovejoy>quote:
originally slang, probably from dialectal lere "learning, knowledge"
So it might follow that a look that attempts to obtain carnal knowledge would be a leer.
March 25, 2006, 21:00
KallehI suppose we will never know for sure, though the COED's entry sounds convincing. I had checked the OED, but there were lots of entries for "leer," and I must have missed that one.