-heit

See also: heit

German

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle High German -heit, from Old High German -heit, and ultimately from *haiduz (personality, character, manner, way).[1] Cognate with Dutch -heid, English -hood, Danish -hed.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /-ˌhaɪ̯t/, [ˌhaɪ̯t] (standard)
  • IPA(key): /-aɪ̯t/ (variant in common speech, especially after a stressed syllable)
  • (file)

Suffix

-heit f (plural -heiten)

  1. Converts an adjective into a noun and usually denotes an abstract quality of the adjectival root. It is often equivalent to the English suffixes -ty and -ness:
    schön (beautiful) + -heitSchönheit (beauty)
    neu (new) + -heitNeuheit (novelty)
  2. Converts concrete nouns into abstract nouns:
    Kind (child) + -heitKindheit (childhood)
    Christ (Christian) + -heitChristenheit (Christendom)

Usage notes

  • While -heit is the normal form of this suffix, it becomes -keit after certain adjectival suffixes. These are -bar, -ig, -isch, -lich, -sam. For example: nützlich (useful) + -heitNützlichkeit (utility).
  • Adjectives ending in -el and -er behave irregularly: eitel (vain) + -heitEitelkeit (vanity); but: dunkel (dark) + -heitDunkelheit (darkness).
  • Sometimes -ig- is added to the adjective and the suffix thus becomes -keit: müde (tired) + -heitMüdigkeit (tiredness). This is the general rule with adjectives in -haft and -los: fehlerhaft (faulty) + -heitFehlerhaftigkeit (faultiness).

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:German_words_suffixed_with_-heit' title='Category:German words suffixed with -heit'>German words suffixed with -heit</a>

References

  1. Kluge, Friedrich (1989), “-heit”, in Elmar Seebold, editor, Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache [Etymological dictionary of the German language] (in German), 22nd edition, →ISBN.

Further reading

  • -heit in Kluge's Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, 1891
  • -heit on the German Wikipedia.Wikipedia de

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Middle Norwegian -heit, a borrow from Middle Low German -heit. Confer with Norwegian Bokmål -het and Swedish -het.

Suffix

-heit f

  1. (colloquial) creates abstract nouns from adjectives
  2. (rare) creates concrete nouns

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Norwegian_Nynorsk_words_suffixed_with_-heit' title='Category:Norwegian Nynorsk words suffixed with -heit'>Norwegian Nynorsk words suffixed with -heit</a>

References

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