sladd
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Swedish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Two main etymologies are 1) end, leftovers, same as slatt, 2) from sladda (“to slide, to skid”), related to släde (“a sled, a sleigh”). However, some meanings are a mix of the two: Komma på sladden, sladdbarn, meaning a trailing bonus chance, can refer either to leftovers or to the trailing sled. Compare Low German sladde ("cloth").
Rope's end, the sailor's term, has been used since 1736, coming Low German.
Clod crusher, the farming tool, has been used since 1695, also written slädd, from the verb sladda.
Noun
[edit]sladd c
- a cord, a cable, (UK) a lead ((insulated, relatively thin) wire between a power outlet and a device or machine)
- stoppa i sladden i vägguttaget
- plug the cord into the wall outlet
- Apparaten har en lång sladd
- The device has a long cord
- a skid, a sideways or oblique slide, (when deliberate) a drift (of a vehicle or the like)
- en sladd ner i diket
- a skid into the ditch
- (uncommon) the end of a line
- (uncommon, figuratively, in some expressions) a trailing part; a trailing bonus chance, an extra
- Bland innehållet märks för övrigt ett porträttgalleri över Götaverkens gudmödrar, där även en fadder fått komma med på sladden
- Among the content is also [noticed] a portrait gallery of the godmothers of Götaverken [a ship wharf], where a godfather has also been included as a bonus
- (uncommon) the end of a filmstrip
- a clodcrusher (farming tool)
- a driveway groomer (road construction tool for maintaining gravel roads)
Usage notes
[edit]- A thick, more heavy-duty cord is often called a kabel instead, like in English.
- Kabel is also often used for wires that do not conduct electricity, like fiber-optic cables, and for some other specific cable types, like network cables (nätverkskablar), like in English.
Declension
[edit]Declension of sladd
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- sladd in Svensk ordbok (SO)
- sladd in Svenska Akademiens ordlista (SAOL)
- sladd in Svenska Akademiens ordbok (SAOB)
References
[edit]- sladd 1, 2, 3 in Elof Hellquist, Svensk etymologisk ordbok (1st ed., 1922)