Ei
See also: Appendix:Variations of "ei"
Translingual
Angami
German
Etymology
From Middle High German and Old High German ei, from Proto-West Germanic *aij, from Proto-Germanic *ajją, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ōwyóm.
Compare Dutch ei, obsolete English ey, West Frisian aai, Danish æg, Yiddish איי (ey).
Pronunciation
audio (file) - IPA(key): /aɪ̯/
- Rhymes: -aɪ̯
Noun
Ei n (strong, genitive Eies or Eis, plural Eier, diminutive Eichen n or Eierchen n or Eilein n)
- egg (all biological senses)
- Willst du dein Ei hart oder weich?
- Do you want your egg hard-boiled or soft-boiled?
- Das befruchtete Ei nistet sich in der Gebärmutter ein.
- The fertilised egg nidates in the uterus.
- something egg-shaped
- (informal, usually in the plural) testicle; ball (also figuratively)
- Mal sehen, ob ihr Eier habt!
- Let’s see if you guys have balls!
- (colloquial, in the plural) bucks (money)
- Kost’ dreißig Eier, der Spaß.
- This thing costs thirty bucks.
- (colloquial, usually vocative, mildly derogatory) clown; foolish bloke
- Da steht „ziehen“, du Ei.
- [The sign] says “pull”, you clown.
Declension
Derived terms
Further reading
- “Ei” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- “Ei” in Uni Leipzig: Wortschatz-Lexikon
- “Ei” in Duden online
Ei on the German Wikipedia.Wikipedia de
- Friedrich Kluge (1883), “Ei”, in , John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891
Plautdietsch
Etymology
From Middle Low German ei, from Old Saxon ei, from Proto-Germanic *ajją, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ōwyóm. Compare Dutch ei, obsolete English ey, West Frisian aai, Danish æg, German Ei.
Derived terms
- Eiajälet
- Eiaküak
- Eirunt
- Eiaschol
- Eiastock
- Eiawittet
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