Dorf
See also: dorf
German
Etymology
From Middle High German dorf, from Old High German dorf, from Proto-Germanic *þurpą, akin to Old Saxon thorp. Compare English troop and archaic English thorp.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /dɔrf/, [dɔɐ̯f], [dɔrf]
audio (file) - Rhymes: -ɔʁf
Noun
Dorf n (genitive Dorfes or Dorfs, plural Dörfer, diminutive Dörfchen n or Dörflein n)
- village (rural habitation of size between a hamlet and a town)
- 1903, Fanny zu Reventlow, Ellen Olestjerne, in Franziska Gräfin zu Reventlow: Gesammelte Werke, Albert Langen, page 551:
- Vor ihnen lag das Dorf mit seinen Strohdächern und dem niedrigen, stumpfen Kirchturm.
- In front of them was the village with its thatched roofs and the small, flat church steeple.
- Vor ihnen lag das Dorf mit seinen Strohdächern und dem niedrigen, stumpfen Kirchturm.
- 1903, Fanny zu Reventlow, Ellen Olestjerne, in Franziska Gräfin zu Reventlow: Gesammelte Werke, Albert Langen, page 551:
- (figuratively) backwater (remote place; somewhere that remains unaffected by new events, progresses, ideas, etc.)
Declension
Derived terms
Derived terms
- böhmische Dörfer
- Bundesdorf
- Dorfanger
- Dorffest
- Dorfmitte
- Dorfplatz
- Dorftratsch
- Dorfältester
- dörflich
- die Kirche im Dorf lassen
- Kirchendorf
- Kuhdorf
- Runddorf
- Rundlingsdorf (= Rundling)
- Straßendorf
- über die Dörfer
Further reading
- Dorf in Duden online
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