Bluträcher

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German

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Etymology

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17th century, from Blutrache +‎ -er and Blut (blood) +‎ Rächer (avenger), eventually probably after Biblical Hebrew גֹּאֵל דָם (gōʾēl dām).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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Bluträcher m (strong, genitive Bluträchers, plural Bluträcher, feminine Bluträcherin)

  1. blood avenger; avenger of blood (one who takes revenge on behalf of a killed person, as in a blood feud)

Declension

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Further reading

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