Alter
German
Etymology
From Middle High German alter, from Old High German altar, from Proto-Germanic *aldrą. Cognate with German Low German Oller.
Pronunciation
- (most of Germany, some of Austria) IPA(key): /ˈaltər/, [ˈʔältʰɐ], [ˈʔaltʰɐ], [ˈʔɑltɑ]
- (Switzerland, some of Germany and Austria) IPA(key): /ˈaltər/, [ˈʔɑltər]
audio (Austria) (file) Audio (file)
Noun
Alter n (genitive Alters, plural Alter)
Declension
Derived terms
- Altersangabe
- Altersdiskriminierung
- Altersdurchschnitt
- Alterserscheinung
- Altersfrage
- Altersgrenze
- Altersgruppe
- Mittelalter
- Jugendalter
- Zeitalter
Descendants
- → Luxembourgish: Alter
Noun
Alter m (genitive Alten, plural Alte, female Alte)
- nominalization of alt (“someone or something old or bygone”)
- old man; old person (male or of unspecified sex)
- (colloquial) mate, bloke (UK); dude, guy (US); a somewhat intimate or mildly dismissive word for a man, especially but not exclusively used as a vocative
- Alter! Komm zurück, wir müssen hier links. ― Dude! Come back, we need to go left here.
- Haste ma ’n Euro für was zu essen, Alter? ― You got a euro for summat to eat, mate? (by a homeless person)
- Wenn irgendso’n Alter hier Ärger macht, schmeiß ihn gleich raus. ― If some bloke acts up in here, kick him right out.
- Ihr Alter hat sie sitzen lassen. ― Her guy jilted her.
Declension
Inflection of Alter
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
m gender | strong declension | |||
nominative | Alter | Alte | ||
genitive | Alten | Alter | ||
dative | Altem | Alten | ||
accusative | Alten | Alte | ||
weak declension | ||||
nominative | der | Alte | die | Alten |
genitive | des | Alten | der | Alten |
dative | dem | Alten | den | Alten |
accusative | den | Alten | die | Alten |
mixed declension | ||||
nominative | ein | Alter | keine | Alten |
genitive | eines | Alten | keiner | Alten |
dative | einem | Alten | keinen | Alten |
accusative | einen | Alten | keine | Alten |
Interjection
Alter
Usage notes
- This use is derived from the word for a man above and is not always clearly distinguishable from it. It is more marked as slang, however, and is also quite common when addressing a female (the latter part in line with the more usual synonym Mann).
Synonyms
Luxembourgish
Etymology
From German Alter n. The masculine gender, though existing dialectally in German, is probably triggered by French âge.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈalteʀ/, [ˈɑltɐ]
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.