Nelke: difference between revisions
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{{also|nelke|neļķe}} |
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==German== |
==German== |
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{{wikipedia|lang=de}} |
{{wikipedia|lang=de}} |
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===Etymology=== |
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{{bor+|de|gml|nēgelke|nēgelke(n)|t=little spike, nail}}, from {{der|de|osx|nagal|t=nail}}. {{dbt|de|Nägelchen|Nägelein}} {{q|archaic}}. |
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Low German-looking forms are already found in {{der|de|gmh|negelkīn}} alongside {{m|gmh|negelīn}}; the contraction is first attested in [[Central German]] {{m|de|Nelekin}}. The feminine form in ''-e'' is a [[backformation]] from the plural. The name is due to the typical form of cloves; compare {{cog|la|clāvulus|t=clove}}, from {{m|la|clāvus|t=nail}}, of which the German form may be a loan translation. |
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===Pronunciation=== |
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* {{IPA|de|[ˈnɛlkə]}} |
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* {{audio|de|De-Nelke.ogg}} |
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===Noun=== |
===Noun=== |
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{{de-noun| |
{{de-noun|f}} |
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# [[clove]] {{gloss|aromatic flower buds of ''[[Wikispecies:Syzygium aromaticum|Syzygium aromaticum]]''}} {{def-date|from 13th c.}} |
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# [[carnation]], [[pink]] (plant) |
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#: {{syn|de|Gewürznelke}} |
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# [[clove]] |
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# [[carnation]], [[pink]] (''[[Wikispecies:Dianthus caryophyllus|Dianthus caryophyllus]]'') {{q|named by analogy for its clove-like smell}} {{def-date|from 15th c.}} |
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====Declension==== |
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{{de-ndecl|f}} |
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====Related terms==== |
====Related terms==== |
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{{col-auto|de |
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|Federnelke |
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|Gartennelke |
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|Gewürznelke |
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|Gewürznelkenbaum |
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|Grasnelke |
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|Kartäusernelke |
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|Lichtnelke |
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|Pissnelke |
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⚫ | |||
|Nelkengewächs |
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|Nelkenöl |
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|Nelkenpfeffer |
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|Nelkenschwindling |
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|Nelkenstrauß |
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⚫ | |||
|Steinnelke |
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|Strandgrasnelke}} |
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====Descendants==== |
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* {{desc|cim|nelke|bor=1}} |
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* {{desc|lv|neļķe|bor=1}} |
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===Further reading=== |
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[[Category:de:Spices and herbs]] |
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* {{R:DWDS}} |
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[[Category:de:Flowers]] |
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* {{R:Duden}} |
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{{C|de|Myrtle family plants|Carnation family plants|Spices}} |
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[[az:Nelke]] |
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[[de:Nelke]] |
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[[et:Nelke]] |
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[[fr:Nelke]] |
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[[ko:Nelke]] |
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[[io:Nelke]] |
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[[it:Nelke]] |
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[[hu:Nelke]] |
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[[mg:Nelke]] |
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[[pl:Nelke]] |
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[[ru:Nelke]] |
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[[fi:Nelke]] |
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[[zh:Nelke]] |
Latest revision as of 08:36, 2 June 2024
German
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Middle Low German nēgelke(n) (“little spike, nail”), from Old Saxon nagal (“nail”). Doublet of Nägelchen and Nägelein (archaic).
Low German-looking forms are already found in Middle High German negelkīn alongside negelīn; the contraction is first attested in Central German Nelekin. The feminine form in -e is a backformation from the plural. The name is due to the typical form of cloves; compare Latin clāvulus (“clove”), from clāvus (“nail”), of which the German form may be a loan translation.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]Nelke f (genitive Nelke, plural Nelken)
- clove (aromatic flower buds of Syzygium aromaticum) [from 13th c.]
- Synonym: Gewürznelke
- carnation, pink (Dianthus caryophyllus) (named by analogy for its clove-like smell) [from 15th c.]
Declension
[edit]Declension of Nelke [feminine]
Related terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]Further reading
[edit]Categories:
- German terms borrowed from Middle Low German
- German terms derived from Middle Low German
- German terms derived from Old Saxon
- German doublets
- German terms derived from Middle High German
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German terms with audio pronunciation
- German lemmas
- German nouns
- German feminine nouns
- de:Myrtle family plants
- de:Carnation family plants
- de:Spices