manoeuvre





See also: manœuvre and manœuvré



Contents






  • 1 English


    • 1.1 Etymology


    • 1.2 Pronunciation


    • 1.3 Noun


    • 1.4 Verb


      • 1.4.1 Derived terms




    • 1.5 See also


    • 1.6 Anagrams







English



Etymology


From Middle French manœuvre (manipulation, manoeuvre) and manouvrer (to manoeuvre), from Old French manovre (handwork, manual labour), from Medieval Latin manopera, manuopera (work done by hand, handwork), from manu (by hand) + operari (to work). First recorded in the Capitularies of Charlemagne (800 AD) to mean "chore, manual task", probably as a calque of the Frankish *handwerc (hand-work). Compare Old English handweorc, Old English handġeweorc, German Handwerk.



Pronunciation




  • (UK) IPA(key): /məˈnuːvə/

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  • (US, Canada) IPA(key): /məˈnuːvɚ/






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  • Rhymes: -uːvə(ɹ)

  • Hyphenation: ma‧noeu‧vre



Noun


manoeuvre (plural manoeuvres)


  1. British spelling, Canadian, and Irish, South African, Australian and New Zealand spelling of maneuver


Verb


manoeuvre (third-person singular simple present manoeuvres, present participle manoeuvring, simple past and past participle manoeuvred)



  1. (transitive) British spelling, Canadian, and Irish, South African, Australian and New Zealand spelling of maneuver


Derived terms


  • manoeuvrable


See also


  • overtaking


Anagrams



  • manoeuver, manœuver



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