allemand

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by WingerBot (talk | contribs) as of 06:03, 1 October 2019.
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See also: Allemand and Allémand

English

Noun

allemand

  1. Misspelling of allemande.

French

Etymology

From Lua error in Module:parameters at line 95: Parameter 2 should be a valid language, etymology language or family code; the value "LL" is not valid. See WT:LOL, WT:LOL/E and WT:LOF. or Alemannus (related to Alamans, ancient Germanic people for whom the name meant "all men", "all people", according to Asinius Quadratus). aleman became alemant by the addition of a terminal T of the singular objective case for adjectives of second class in Old French, and then alemand. The Latin word itself derives from the Old High German Alaman, from a Proto-Germanic *Alamanniz, likely from the roots *allaz (whence English all) and *manniz < *mann- (whence English man).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /al.mɑ̃/
  • Audio (Parisian):(file)
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

A text in German (allemand) written by Goethe.

allemand m (plural allemands)

  1. German (The German language)
    Synonyms: langue de Goethe, langue de Charlemagne, langue des Francs
    L’allemand est une langue germanique.German is a Germanic language.
    Mon stagiaire parle un allemand impeccable.My trainee speaks perfect German.
    Parlez-vous allemand ?Do you speak German?

Hypernyms

Derived terms

Adjective

allemand (feminine allemande, masculine plural allemands, feminine plural allemandes)

  1. German (related to or originating from Germany)
    J’ai acheté une voiture allemande.I've bought a German car.
    Les contes allemands sont fameux.German fairy tales are famous.
  2. German (related to the German language)
    Il n’y a pas qu’en Allemagne qu’on utilise des mots allemands.Not only in Germany does one use German words.
    La traduction allemande de France est Frankreich.The German translation of "France" is Frankreich.

Related terms

See also

Further reading