Spyke
discuss.tchncs.de

No, compound words are usually just compound nouns. Exactly the same as in English, except the space is missing.

10
feddit.org

i really dont like that "compound word" is not a proper compoundword.

i hope my mispelling spreads far enough to remedy this.

5
superkretreply
feddit.org

German here. That's an entirely different word, with a different word stem and history, despite being spelled exactly the same.

Also completely unrelated to Zeugen (witnesses) and zeugen (conceive).

30

Honestly, I love this language. And I fully understand anyone who hates it.

9
Asetrureply
feddit.org

Like... Fire things, green things, bed things, playing things and hundreds of other things. Love it almost as much as animals that are just something-animal. Like bag-animal (marsupial), beak-animal (platypus) or belt-animal (armadillo).

11

I think it's fun how Zeug has gone from a technical meaning to a cute one.

The current meaning of Zeug is something like stuff or unimportant things.

It used to mean kit, gear or equipment though, which makes a lot of sense and is still visible in words like Zeugwart (equipment manager of a sports team or army).

With that knowledge, Werkzeug would just be a tool kit.

7

Same thing in Norwegian with "tøy" (verktøy, fly, kjøretøy, plus fartøy for water-faring vessels) … and then tøy by itself means cloth or clothes (also available through klestøy)

7
stetechreply
lemmy.world

Someone break this word down for me

Hilfe leistungs lösch gruppen fahrzeug

(technically i’d need to add capitalization and dashes when separating into full nouns)

help giving exterminating groups’ vehicle drive thing (as others in this thread have noted)

Das Hilfeleistungslöschgruppenfahrzeug der Feuerwehr […]

The aid-providing fire-fighting vehicle of the fire department

Es transportiert Feuerwehrleute, Leitern, Werkzeuge, Schläu[che…]

It transports firefighters, ladders, tools, hoses

Not gonna lie, it’s a bit over the top. Feuerwehrfahrzeug (fire dept’s truck) would’ve sufficed IMO. Nobody not working as a firefighter (and arguably not even all of those who do) knows let alone uses that long-form word.

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German rule | Spyke