English
Etymology
From curb (“raised border or frame”) [from mid-17th c.]. Doublet of curve.
Pronunciation
Noun
kerb (plural kerbs)
- (British spelling) Alternative spelling of curb.
Derived terms
Translations
edge between pavement and roadway
- Belarusian: бардзю́р m (bardzjúr)
- Bulgarian: бордю́р (bg) m (bordjúr)
- Catalan: vorada f, rastell (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 路緣 / 路缘 (zh) (lùyuán)
- Czech: obrubník (cs) m
- Danish: kantsten c
- Dutch: stoeprand (nl), borduur (nl)
- Faroese: kantsteinur m
- Finnish: reunakiveys (fi), jalkakäytävän reuna, reunakivi (fi)
- French: bordure (fr) f, bordure du trottoir f
- Galician: bordo (gl) m
- Georgian: ბორდიური (bordiuri)
- German: Bordstein (de) m, Randstein (de) m, Bordkante f, Kantstein (de) m, Kante (de) f, Steinrand m
- Hungarian: járdaszegély (hu)
- Indonesian: kanstin, kereb
- Irish: colbha m
- Italian: orlo del marciapiede m, cordolo (it) m
- Japanese: 縁石 (ja) (えんせき, enseki, ふちいし, fuchiishi, へりいし, heriishi)
- Korean: 연석(緣石) (ko) (yeonseok), 갓돌 (gatdol)
- Latin: crepīdō f
- Macedonian: раб m (rab)
- Malay: bebendul
- Maori: tapa rori, paeara
- Persian: جدول (fa) (jadval)
- Polish: krawężnik (pl) m
- Portuguese: meio-fio (pt) m, lancil (pt) m, guia (pt) f
- Romanian: bordură (ro) f
- Russian: бордю́р (ru) m (bordjúr), поре́брик (ru) m (porébrik) (regional, rare)
- Scottish Gaelic: oir chabhsair f
- Serbo-Croatian: rubnik (sh), ivičnjak (sh) m
- Slovak: obrubník m
- Slovene: robnik m
- Spanish: bordillo (es) m, sardinel (es) m
- Swedish: trottoarkant (sv) c
- Ukrainian: бордю́р (uk) m (bordjúr), бро́вка (uk) f (bróvka), брі́вка (uk) f (brívka)
- Welsh: ymyl palmant m, ymyl pafin m
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Verb
kerb (third-person singular simple present kerbs, present participle kerbing, simple past and past participle kerbed)
- (British, transitive) To damage vehicle wheels or tyres by running into or over a pavement kerb.
- To take a dog to the kerb for the purpose of evacuating.
1946, George Johnston, Skyscrapers in the Mist, page 35:I was fidgeting a bit, because three dogs were sniffing at my ankles in an interested fashion. They were going out to be kerbed[.]
Anagrams
Northern Kurdish
Pronunciation
Noun
kerb f
- hatred