Schwalbe

See also: schwalbe

English

Proper noun

Schwalbe

  1. (aviation, military) The World War II Messerschmitt Me-262 jet fighter.

German

Etymology

From Middle High German swalwe, from Old High German swalwa, from Proto-Germanic *swalwǭ. Cognatew with Middle Dutch swaluwe (modern Dutch zwaluw), Old Saxon swala, Old English swealwe (modern English swallow), Old Norse svala (Danish svale, Swedish svala).

The football sense from a saying „Der fliegt wie ’ne Schwalbe!“ (“The man flies like a swallow!”), or the like, punning on fliegen in the sense of “to fall”. Compare hinfliegen (to fall down).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈʃvalbə/, [ˈʃʋälbə]
  • (file)

Noun

Schwalbe f (genitive Schwalbe, plural Schwalben)

  1. swallow (bird)
  2. (sports, soccer) dive (deliberate fall, simulated foul)
  3. (aviation, military) a WWII Messerschmitt Me-262 jet-fighter

Declension

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Dutch: schwalbe
  • Silesian: šwalbkowate (compounded with native word)

Further reading

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