Heft

See also: heft and Hëft

German

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /hɛft/
  • (Germany)
    (file)
  • (Austria)
    (file)
    IPA(key): /das‿ˈhɛft/

Etymology 1

18th-century backformation from heften (to fasten), from *haftijaną (to bind, secure).

Alternative forms

  • H. (abbreviation, chiefly in context)

Noun

Heft n (genitive Heftes or Hefts, plural Hefte, diminutive Heftchen n)

  1. notebook, writing booklet, cahier (book in which notes or memoranda are written)
  2. notepad, writing pad (pad of paper on which one jots down notes)
  3. exercise book (booklet for students, containing problems and exercises, or blank pages for writing answers)
  4. number, issue (single edition of a periodical publication)
  5. magazine (non-academic periodical publication)
  6. comic (magazine that uses sequences of drawings to tell a story or series of stories)

Etymology 2

From Middle High German hefte, from Old High German hefti, from Proto-Germanic *haftiją. Cognate with Dutch heft, English haft.

Noun

Heft n (genitive Heftes or Hefts, plural Hefte)

  1. (literary, historical, specialist or regional, widely obsolete) haft; handle (of a weapon or certain tools)
Usage notes
  • In large parts of Germany, this word is unknown even to well educated native speakers. Even the common expression das Heft in der Hand haben/halten (to be in charge, literally to hold the haft in one's hand) is interpreted as a derivative of etymology 1.

Declension


Pennsylvania German

Etymology

Compare German Heft, Dutch heft, English haft.

Noun

Heft n

  1. hilt
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