where is the word spur in the bible
I dug the spur into the horse's side, causing him to gallop faster.
I wasn't sure what to do so killed the rat, it was on the spur of the moment
Embolden.
The cowboy kicked the horse with his spurs. OR On the spur of the moment, I told a funny joke that had the nurses in stitches.
The word spur came from before the 12th century. It originates from the Old English words spora, and spura, which have Germanic origin; it is also related to the Dutch word spoor and the German word Sporn, also to spurn.
The word 'spur' is both a noun (spur, spurs) and a verb (spur, spurs, spurring, spurred). The noun spur is a common, singular noun; a word for devises put on your shoes to signal a horse to move forward. The verb spur means to goad or urge into action; to proceed hurriedly; to press forward.
The Latin incitare which means to spur or urge on
Stimulant, pick-me-up, spur, tonic, catalyst...
The word "spur" comes before "spurts" in alphabetical order. This is because the word "spur" has fewer letters and the letter "r" comes before the letter "t" in the English alphabet. Therefore, when arranging these words alphabetically, "spur" would precede "spurts."
Improvisation
Spur