Hobel
German
Etymology
From Middle High German hovel, hobel, hubel, etc., from Old High German hovil, huobil. This is perhaps an early borrowing from Old Saxon because until the 14th century the word was chiefly Low German; compare Middle Low German hōvel. The wide variety of forms may also corroborate this. Related with Hubbel (“bump”), dialectal Hübel (“hill”), Dutch heuvel. It seems uncertain whether the noun Hobel was derived from the verb hobeln or vice versa.
Pronunciation
Noun
Hobel m (strong, genitive Hobels, plural Hobel)
- anything that abrades a surface, such as – particularly – a plane, a grater or slicer, a spokeshave, a safety razor
Declension
Declension of Hobel [masculine, strong]
Derived terms
- Barthobel
- Doppelhobel
- Falzhobel
- Fleischhobel
- Gemüsehobel
- Glatthobel
- Grathobel
- Grundhobel
- Handhobel
- Hirnholzhobel
- Hornhauthobel
- Kantenhobel
- Käsehobel
- Kehlhobel
- Kohlenhobel
- Krauthobel
- Nuthobel
- Profilhobel
- Putzhobel
- Rasierhobel
- Schabhobel
- Schiffhobel
- Schlichthobel
- Schrupphobel
- Schweifhobel
- Simshobel
- Spätzlehobel
- Spundhobel
- Stoßhobel
- Tischhobel
- Tonhobel
- Trüffelhobel
- Vergatthobel
- Weithobel
- Zahnhobel
Related terms
Further reading
Categories:
- German terms inherited from Middle High German
- German terms derived from Middle High German
- German terms inherited from Old High German
- German terms derived from Old High German
- German terms derived from Old Saxon
- German terms derived from Middle Low German
- German 2-syllable words
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German terms with audio pronunciation
- German lemmas
- German nouns
- German masculine nouns
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