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ers
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ERS
ERSEmergency Radio Service.
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-ers
-ersa semantically empty suffix that creates informal variations of more neutral nouns and adjectives by processes of truncation identical to those of -er (champers; preggers; starkers ); unlike that suffix, however, -ers is apparently productive, and words formed with it do not appear to belong to a restricted linguistic register, as university slang.
ers
1 Americannoun
abbreviation
Etymology
Origin of ers1
Middle French < Old Provençal < Late Latin ervus, variant of Latin ervum. See ervil
Origin of -ers3
Perhaps a conflation of -er 7 with the final element of bonkers and crackers in the sense “wild, crazy” (unless these words themselves contain this suffix); cf. -s 3
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
See Examples For:
But we lived in a way unimaginable to 9-5 ers.
From New York Times ● Dec. 12, 2018
The United States soon got wind of Guevara’s presence and sent CIA agents and military advis ers to assist the regime of René Barrientos.
From The Guardian ● Oct. 5, 2017
Roosevelt Island is fantastic: right in the middle of the Potomac River and filled with woodpeck- ers, frogs, marshes, trails, and a seventeen-foot statue of Roosevelt himself, in shining bronze and larger than life.
From MSNBC ● Sep. 9, 2014
At the same time, Israeli landing craft and helicopters surprised the defend ers by placing troops and even tanks as far north as the Zahrani River, 30 miles north of the border.
From Time Magazine Archive
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It has nothing to do with childhood or school or Gobstoppers or dead mice or Boaz- ers or summer holidays among the islands of Norway.
From "Boy: Tales of a Childhood" by Roald Dahl
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ERS doesn’t traffic in emotional realism or literal re-creation.
From Los Angeles Times ● Apr. 8, 2025
Jess Blair, director of electoral reform campaigners ERS Cymru, said: "Voters are once again at risk of losing out without the ability to choose who replaces their MS."
From BBC ● Jan. 23, 2025
Although the ERS data are helping many plan future observations, most cycle 1 data are still locked up and some will remain so until the second half of 2024.
From Science Magazine ● Nov. 2, 2022
“If ERS is known for anything,” Simpson says, “we’re known for our livestock, wallpaper and violent dance.”
From New York Times ● Jul. 24, 2022
But ERS Cymru said the effects will not be evenly spread across society, and could disproportionately impact Wales.
From BBC ● Nov. 20, 2021
Paisley had never been a competitive swimmer or a dancer or any of the other -ers that might help someone dance underwater.
From Washington Post ● Jun. 15, 2018
A -ers gath- -ing moss no roll- stone.
From Little Folks (October 1884) A Magazine for the Young by Various
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.