Maschile

Zettel

Senso (Inglese)

  1. (masculine, strong) a small or loose piece of paper, slip
  2. (masculine, strong) note, message, letter
  3. (masculine, strong) poster, placard, public notice

Concetti

Frequenza

B2
Dialetti

Canton Basilea Campagna

Canton Basilea Campagna

zettel

Canton Basilea Campagna

Canton Basilea Campagna

faggel

Canton Basilea Campagna

Canton Basilea Campagna

wiisch

Canton Basilea Campagna

Canton Basilea Campagna

zeedel

Dati forniti da: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Pronunciato come (IPA)
/ˈt͡sɛtəl/
Etimologia (Inglese)

In summary

From Early New High German zeddel, zedel, from Middle High German zedele, zedel, a loan from Italian cedola, from Medieval Latin cedula, schedula, the diminutive of scheda, scida (“strip of papyrus”) ultimately from Ancient Greek σχίδη (skhídē, “splinter, fragment”). Cognate to Low German Zeddel, Palatine Rhine Franconian Zeddel, English schedule. The spelling with -tt- was found from the 15th century in Upper German; the spelling with -dd- persisted until the 19th century, primarily in authors from Central or Northern Germany. Luther mostly writes zedel, Goethe alternates between zeddel and zettel. The (now obsolete) spelling variant zettul is influenced by French cédule. Occasional weak inflection was found in Middle High German and persisted into the 18th century. The original feminine gender was retained until Luther's time, but occasional masculine or neuter gender was found by the late Middle High German period. The masculine gender has predominated since the 19th century.

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