קנאָבל
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Yiddish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Shortened from an earlier form קנאָבליך (knoblikh) (which was preserved in Western Yiddish), possibly because the ending was interpreted as the diminutive plural ending ־לעך (-lekh); the same shortening happened in some other Germanic languages (compare e.g. Swabian Knobl vs standard German Knoblauch, which see for more).[1] Ultimately from Middle High German knobelouch.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]קנאָבל • (knobl) m, plural קנאָבלען (knoblen), feminine קנאָבלקע (knoblke), diminutive קנעבל (knebl)
Derived terms
[edit]- פֿאַרקנאָבלען (farknoblen)
- קנאָבלברויט (knoblbroyt)
References
[edit]- ^ Alexander Beider, Origins of Yiddish Dialects (2015)