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skær

Skör is an adjective in Swedish meaning brittle, fragile, or easily broken. It describes both physical things—such as glass, dry twigs, or thin ice—and abstract states, such as health or a relationship, that lack stability or resilience. In compounds it can modify nouns directly, for example ben (bone) in ben- och hudskörhet (osteoporosis and fragile skin), and skörhet (fragility) as a noun denotes the condition of being skör.

Common collocations include skör hälsa (fragile health), skör vänskap (precarious friendship), and skör ekonomi (fragile economy),

Pronounced approximately /ɧøːr/, skör forms skörhet (fragility) in the singular and sköra (plural) for nouns that

Etymologically, skör derives from Old Norse skjǫrr “brittle, weak,” cognate with Icelandic skjör and Faroese skjór.

as
well
as
set
phrases
like
skör
som
glas
(brittle
as
glass).
In
figurative
usage,
skör
emphasizes
sensitivity
and
the
ease
with
which
something
can
be
damaged
or
disrupted.
take
such
agreement.
Its
comparative
and
superlative
are
mer
skör
and
mest
skör
or,
less
commonly,
skörare
and
skörast.
It
is
used
mainly
in
Swedish
but
appears
as
a
loanword
in
English
in
specialized
or
stylistic
contexts.
Danish
and
Norwegian
have
a
related
adjective
skør/om
which
can
mean
“foolish,
silly,”
a
semantic
shift
not
shared
by
Swedish
skör.