English
Proper noun
New High German
- The modern form of the German language, successor to Middle High German.
Synonyms
- German (in non-technical contexts)
- NHG, NHG., N.H.G., N. H. G. (abbreviations)
Hyponyms
Coordinate terms
Translations
modern German language
- Danish: nyhøjtysk, tysk (da) (in non-technical contexts)
- French: haut-allemand moderne m
- Galician: alto alemán moderno m
- Georgian: ახალი ზემოგერმანული ენა (axali zemogermanuli ena), თანამედროვე გერმანული ენა (tanamedrove germanuli ena)
- German: Neuhochdeutsch (de) n
- Volhynian German: Neihochdeitsch n
- Hungarian: újfelnémet (hu)
- Irish: Nua-Ard-Ghearmáinis f
- Low German: Neehoochdüütsch n, Niehoochdüütsch n, Nieghoochdüütsch n
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: nyhøgtysk m, nyhøytysk m
- Nynorsk: nyhøgtysk m
- Swedish: nyhögtyska c, yngre nyhögtyska c
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Adjective
New High German (not comparable)
- Of or relating to New High German.
1995, Ilse Middendorf, The Perceptible Breath: A Breathing Science (Preface); in: Don Hanlon Johnson (ed.), Bone, Breath & Gesture: Practices of Embodiment, page 75:The history of the New High German word Körper (corpus) starts with its Middle High German borrowing from the Latin word corpus, body flesh, corpse, shadow (of a dead person), trunk, belly, person, nature, and others, and leads over the years to the latest form.
Translations
of or relating to the modern German language
- Danish: nyhøjtysk, tysk (da) (in non-technical contexts)
- Georgian: ახალი ზემოგერმანული (axali zemogermanuli), თანამედროვე გერმანული (tanamedrove germanuli)
- German: neuhochdeutsch (de)
- Hungarian: újfelnémet (hu)
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