Schinken

German

Etymology

From Middle High German schinke, from Old High German scinco, from Proto-West Germanic *skinkō, from Proto-Germanic *skinkô, *skinkō (shank; thigh). In the sense “tome” originally student slang (18th c.), from the use of pigskin leather to bind such books.

Related to German Low German Schinken (also: skinken, sschinken (Westphalian; linguistic spelling; accusative)) Middle Dutch schenke (shin, hough, ham), Middle English schench (thigh; leg), dialectal English skink (a shin of beef), also English shank (lower part of the leg).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈʃɪŋkən/, [ˈʃɪŋkŋ̩]
  • Audio:(file)
  • Audio:(file)
  • Audio:(file)
  • Hyphenation: Schin‧ken

Noun

Schinken m (strong, genitive Schinkens, plural Schinken)

  1. ham, pork from the hindquarter
    • 1803, Neues Kochbuch für bürgerliche Haushaltungen, oder Anweisung zur Zubereitung einer gesunden und schmackhaften Hausmannskost, [...], Coburg, page 62:
      Einen Schinken gut zu backen. [] wällt ihn nach der Form des Schinken aus, [] Wenn der der Schinken abgetrocknet ist, []
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
  2. (colloquial) hams, buttocks
    Synonym: Oberschenkel
  3. (colloquial, often derogatory) old tome or painting
    Ölschinken(large) oil painting

Declension

Derived terms

  • Lachsschinken
  • Ölschinken

Descendants

  • Bulgarian: шунка (šunka)
  • Czech: šunka
  • Esperanto: ŝinko
  • Estonian: sink
  • Hungarian: sonka
  • Latvian: šķiņķis
  • Macedonian: шунка (šunka)
  • Polish: szynka
  • Romanian: șuncă
  • Russian: шинка (šinka) (regional)
  • Serbo-Croatian: šunka / шунка
  • Slovak: šunka
  • Slovene: šunka
  • Ukrainian: шинка (šynka)
  • Yiddish: שינקע (shinke) (via a Slavic borrowing)

Further reading