luft
English
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈluft]
Danish
Etymology
From Middle Low German luft, lucht (“air, smell”), from Old Saxon luft, from Proto-West Germanic *luftu. Probably influenced by German Luft (“air”). It is a cognate of Danish loft (“attic”) and Danish lugt (“smell”).
Pronunciation
IPA(key): [ˈlɔfd]
Faroese
Etymology
From Middle Low German lucht, from Old Saxon luft, from Proto-West Germanic *luftu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [lʊft]
Declension
Declension of luft (singular only) | ||
---|---|---|
f2s | singular | |
indefinite | definite | |
nominative | luft | luftin |
accusative | luft | luftina |
dative | luft | luftini |
genitive | luftar | luftarinnar |
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English lyft (“air, atmosphere, firmament”), from Proto-West Germanic *luftu, from Proto-Germanic *luftuz (“air, upper region”). More at lift.
Norwegian Bokmål
Derived terms
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Middle Low German lucht.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lʉft/
Derived terms
Old Frisian
Alternative forms
- lufte
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *luftu, from Proto-Germanic *luftuz (“air, upper region”).
Polish
Etymology
Borrowed from German Luft, from Middle High German luft, from Old High German luft, from Proto-West Germanic *luftu, from Proto-Germanic *luftuz.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /luft/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -uft
- Syllabification: luft
Noun
luft m inan (diminutive lufcik)
- (archaic, architecture) pipe in a stove, chimney, or kitchen that carries away smoke
- (colloquial, Poznań, Upper Silesia) air, air supply
- Synonym: powietrze
Declension
Scots
Etymology
From Middle English luft, lufte, from Old English lyft (“the lower sky (as opposed to the upper atmosphere, or heavens), air, atmosphere”), from Proto-West Germanic *luftu, from Proto-Germanic *luftuz.
Noun
luft (uncountable)
- Alternative form of lift.
- 1898, David Hay Fleming, Mary Queen of Scots (in English), page 437:
- Bothwell told Sir James Melville that he saw the strangest accident that ever chancit, to wit the powder cam out of the luft [i.e. the sky], and had brunt the Kingis house, and himself found lying dead a litle distance from the house under a tre;
- 1977, Douglas Young, Clara Young, David D. Murison, A Clear Voice: Douglas Young, Poet and Polymath (in English), page 39:
- Gesserant sails on a skinklan frith, gowd-yalla luft and blue o the sea
- 1996, Review of Scottish Culture - Issues 10-12 (in English), page 101:
- […] kind of phonetic spelling which resembles Elphinston's recommendations for an orthographic reform as issued in the eighteenth century, so his proverbs and sayings have to be practically translated: Gin dhe luft wuz tay faw, dhe laivruks wud bee smuird – if the sky were to fall, the larks would be smothered.
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Serbo-Croatian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lûft/
Swedish
Pronunciation
audio (file)
Declension
Declension of luft | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Uncountable | ||||
Indefinite | Definite | |||
Nominative | luft | luften | — | — |
Genitive | lufts | luftens | — | — |
Derived terms
- flyga i luften (“to be blown up”)
- bygga luftslott (“to build castles in the air”)
- frilufts-
- luftherravälde
- lufthunger
- luftmotstånd
- luftskepp
- luftslott
- luftvärn
- luftöverlägsenhet
- tagen ur luften (“it is completely made up”, literally “taken out of thin air”)