Bogen
German
Etymology
From Middle High German boge, from Old High German bogo, from Proto-Germanic *bugô. Compare Dutch boog, English bow, Danish bue, Norwegian boge.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈboːɡən/, /ˈboː.ɡŋ̩/
Audio (Austria) (file) Audio (file)
Usage notes
- The normal plural is Bögen. This form is marked as southern in many dictionaries, but has now become the predominant form in the northern half of the language area, too.
- The unchanged plural Bogen is still predominant in some compound words (such as Regenbogen or Ellenbogen), but less common otherwise.
Declension
Hyponyms
(weapon)
- Fiberglasbogen
- Flitzebogen
- Kunststoffbogen
- Schießbogen
(music)
- Bassbogen
- Bratschenbogen
- Carbonbogen
- Cellobogen
- Gambenbogen
- Geigenbogen
- Kontrabassbogen
- Rundbogen
- Streichbogen
- Violabogen
- Violinbogen
- Violoncellobogen
(curve)
- Ellbogen
- Halbbogen
- Inselbogen
- Kreisbogen
- Regenbogen
- Straßenbogen
- Viertelbogen
(arch)
- Fensterbogen
- Torbogen
- Triumpfbogen
- Türbogen
(sheet)
- A4-Bogen
- Achtelbogen
- Doppelbogen
- Einfachbogen
- Erhebungsbogen
- Fragebogen
- Halbbogen
- Normalbogen
- Papierbogen
- Standardbogen
- Vierfachbogen
- Viertelbogen
Derived terms
- bogenartig
- bogenweise
- bogig
Related terms
- Bogenbündel
- Bogenfenster
- Bogenflanke
- bogenförmig
- Bogenhand
- Bogenlinie
- Bogenschießen
- Bogenschütze
See also
- Pfeil m
Further reading
- Bogen in Duden online
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.