Tag

Reikšmė (anglų kalba)

Dažnis

A1
Tarmės

Ciuricho kantonas

Ciuricho kantonas

tag

Fribūro kantonas

Fribūro kantonas

taag

Apencelis-Inerodenas

Apencelis-Inerodenas

tag

Bazelio sritis

Bazelio sritis

daag

Duomenis pateikė: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Tariama kaip (IPA)
/taːk/
Etimologija (anglų kalba)

Inherited from Middle High German tac, tag, from Old High German tag, tac (attested since the 8th century); from Proto-West Germanic *dag, from Proto-Germanic *dagaz, possibly from Proto-Indo-European *dʰegʷʰ- (“to burn, to be illuminated”). Germanic cognates include Old Saxon dag (whence German Low German Dag), Old Dutch dag (whence Dutch dag, Afrikaans dag), Old English dæġ (whence Modern English day), West Frisian dei, Old Norse dagr (whence Icelandic dagur, Faroese dagur, Norwegian Bokmål dag, Norwegian Nynorsk dag, Swedish dag, Danish dag), Yiddish טאָג (tog) and Gothic 𐌳𐌰𐌲𐍃 (dags). Non-Germanic cognates include Albanian djeg (“to burn”), Latin foveō (“to warm, nurture”), favilla (“cinders, ashes”), Ancient Greek τέφρα (téphra), Lithuanian dãgas (“hot season”), Russian жечь (žečʹ, “to burn”), Sanskrit दहति (dahati, “to burn”). Although they are similar in appearance and meaning, German Tag and Proto-Germanic *dagaz are not related to Latin diēs as older folk etymology suggested; instead, the Latin word is derived from Proto-Indo-European *dyew- (“to shine”). See the Latvian diena (“day”) and Sanskrit दिन (diná, “day”) for more. In earlier legal documents since Middle High German, Tag was frequently used in the meaning of “a fixed day for meeting, debate, or appointment,” which was associated with words like Reichstag, Landtag, later Ratstag, and tagen (“to hold a meeting”), etc.

Pažymėkite tai

Pagerinkite savo tarimą

Parašykite šį žodį

vokiečių

Pradėkite mokytis vokiečių naudodami learnfeliz .

Treniruokitės kalbėti ir įsiminti " Tag " ir daug kitų žodžių ir sakinių vokiečių .

Eikite į mūsų kurso puslapį vokiečių

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes

Questions