Betekenis (Engels)

  1. (class-2, intransitive, strong, weak) to suck (to create underpressure with a tube-like object such as one's mouth)
  2. (class-2, strong, transitive, weak) to suck (something)
  3. (abbreviation, alt-of, class-2, colloquial, ellipsis, strong, weak) ellipsis of staubsaugen (“to vacuum”)
  4. (Internet, class-2, colloquial, strong, transitive, weak) to download something, especially illegally
  5. (class-2, dated, intransitive, slang, strong, weak) to suck (to be inferior or objectionable)

Frekwensie

C2
Dialekte

Kanton Aargau

Kanton Aargau

söggele

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

lulle

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

luurtsche

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

ninnele

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

nuggele

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

nuggerle

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

nunnele

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

syggele

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

suuge

Kanton Basel-Land

Kanton Basel-Land

suggele

Data verskaf deur: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Uitgespreek as (IPA)
[ˈzaʊ̯ɡn̩]
Etimologie (Engels)

In summary

From Middle High German sūgen, from Old High German sūgan (“to suck”), from Proto-West Germanic *sūgan, from Proto-Germanic *sūganą, from Proto-Indo-European *sewk-. The sense “be inferior or objectionable”, which was never common and always somewhat jocular or tongue-in-cheek, is a semantic loan from English suck in the same sense. Compare Low German sugen, Dutch zuigen, Danish suge.

Notes

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