odour









odour


noun Chiefly British.

  1. odor.

noun

  1. the property of a substance that activates the sense of smell: to have an unpleasant odor.
  2. a sensation perceived by the sense of smell; scent.
  3. an agreeable scent; fragrance.
  4. a disagreeable smell.
  5. a quality or property characteristic or suggestive of something: An odor of suspicion surrounded his testimony.
  6. repute: in bad odor with the whole community.
  7. Archaic. something that has a pleasant scent.

noun

  1. the property of a substance that gives it a characteristic scent or smell
  2. a pervasive quality about somethingan odour of dishonesty
  3. repute or regard (in the phrases in good odour, in bad odour)

noun

  1. the US spelling of odour

n.chiefly British English spelling of odor (q.v.); for spelling, see -or. n.c.1300, from Anglo-French odour, from Old French odor “smell, perfume, fragrance” (12c., Modern French odeur) and directly from Latin odor “a smell, a scent” (pleasant or disagreeable), from PIE *od- “to smell” (cf. Latin olere “emit a smell, to smell of,” with Sabine -l- for -d-; Greek ozein “to smell;” Armenian hotim “I smell;” Lithuanian uodziu “to smell”). Good or bad odor, in reference to repute, estimation, is from 1835. Odor of sanctity (1756) is from French odeur de sainteté (17c.) “sweet or balsamic scent said to be exhaled by the bodies of eminent saints at death or upon disinterment.” n.

  1. The property or quality of a thing that affects, stimulates, or is perceived by the sense of smell.
  2. A sensation, stimulation, or perception of the sense of smell.
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