An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, I (1891)
by Friedrich Kluge, translated by John Francis Davis
irre
Friedrich Kluge2507335An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, I — irre1891John Francis Davis

irre, adj., ‘in error, astray, insane, confused,’ from the equiv. MidHG. irre, OHG. irri, adj. (OHG. also ‘provoked’); corresponding to AS. yrre, ‘provoked, angry.’ Allied to Goth. airzeis, ‘astray, misled’ (HG. rr equal to Goth. rz). Anger was regarded as an aberration of mind (comp. also Lat. delirare, allied to lira, ‘furrow,’ prop. ‘rut’). The root ers appears also in Lat. errare, ‘to go astray’ (for *ersare), error, ‘mistake’ (for *ersor); allied also to Sans. irasy, ‘to behave violently, be angry’?. —