נויט
Yiddish
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German nōt, from Old High German nōt from Proto-Germanic *naudiz. Compare German Not and Dutch nood.
Noun
נויט • (noyt) f, plural נויטן (noytn)
Derived terms
- נויט־מצב (noyt-matsev)
- נויט־עצה (noyt-eytse)
- נויטבאַדערפֿעניש (noytbaderfenish)
- נויטדאָרפֿט (noytdorft)
- נויטווענדיק (noytvendik)
- נויטיק (noytik)
- נויטפֿאַל (noytfal)
- נויטשווייס (noytshveys)
Related terms
- נייטיק (neytik)
References
- https://web.archive.org/web/20060202015659/http://www.yiddishdictionaryonline.com/
- Astravux, Aljaksandar (2008) “nojt”, in Idyš-bjelaruski slóŭnik [Yiddish–Belarusian Dictionary], Minsk: Mjedisónt, →ISBN, page 576
- Justus van de Kamp et al., “נויט” in Jiddisch-Nederlands Woordenboek [Yiddish-Dutch Dictionary], Amsterdam: Stichting Jiddische Lexicografie, 1987-present (ongoing). [1].