Drossel

See also: drossel

German

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdʁɔsəl/, [ˈdʁɔsəl], [ˈdʁɔsl̩], [ˈd̥-]
  • (file)

Etymology 1

From Middle High German droschel, from Old High German drōscala, from Proto-Germanic *þrustalǭ, possibly altered from or a diminutive of *þurstaz, from Proto-Indo-European *trosdos.

Duden instead suggests a borrowing from Low German, from Middle Low German drōsle, perhaps ultimately imitative.[1]

The modern consonantism is Central and Low German; compare Middle Low German drōsle, from Old Saxon thrōsla. Compare archaic English throstle.

Noun

Drossel f (genitive Drossel, plural Drosseln)

  1. thrush (songbird of the family Turdidae)
Declension
Hyponyms
Derived terms
  • Drosselbart
  • Drosselei
  • Drosseljunges
  • Drosselnest
  • Drosselstelze

Etymology 2

From Middle High German drozzel, from Old High German drozza, perhaps ultimately from the root of strotzen.[2] Akin to Old English þrote.

Noun

Drossel f (genitive Drossel, plural Drosseln)

  1. throttle (valve)
  2. (hunting) gorge of game
  3. (anatomy, archaic) throat
    Synonyms: Kehle, Gurgel
Declension
Derived terms

References

  1. Drossel” in Duden online
  2. Friedrich Kluge (1883), Drossel”, in , John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891

Further reading

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