SPOOR


Meaning of SPOOR in English

I. ˈspu̇(ə)r, -u̇ə sometimes ˈspō(ə)r or ˈspōə or ˈspȯ(ə)r or ˈspȯ(ə) noun

( plural spoor or spoors )

Etymology: Afrikaans, from Middle Dutch spor, spoor; akin to Old English, Old High German, & Old Norse spor footprint, track, Old English spurnan to kick — more at spurn

: a mark (as a footprint), a trail, a scent, a sound, or droppings left by one (as a wild animal) that has passed : track , sign

spoor of three large bulls … the tracks unusual in size — Police Gazette

a spoor of blood from a slug in his right thigh — Time

tell roughly how old a spoor is by the color and heat of the droppings — B.D.Nicholson

II. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: probably from Afrikaans, from Middle Dutch sporen, from spor spoor

transitive verb

: to track by a spoor

spooring animals and interpreting every mark on the sand — Frank Debenham

intransitive verb

: to track something by a spoor

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.