Eulenspiegel

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German[edit]

Dyl Ulenspiegel

Etymology[edit]

From Ulenspiegel (1st half of the 16th century), Middle Low German Ūlenspēgel. Its modern semantics is due to the mischievous nature of Till Eulenspiegel, protagonist of a folklore published in 1515.

By surface analysis, Eule +‎ -n- +‎ Spiegel, literally “owl mirror”, an analysis already drawn upon in the original tale.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • Hyphenation: Eu‧len‧spie‧gel

Noun[edit]

Eulenspiegel m (strong, genitive Eulenspiegels, plural Eulenspiegel)

  1. jester, prankster

Declension[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

Further reading[edit]