Kegel

See also: kegel

English

Noun

Kegel (plural Kegels)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of kegel

Synonyms

  • Kegel exercise

Anagrams


German

Etymology

From an Old High German chegil "peg", especially pegs for a tent (zeltchegil) or similar. Middle High German kegel means "peg or pin used for a game" (such as skittles), but regional use from the 14th century onward also preserve a more general meaning of "peg, cudgel".

The etymology cannot be traced with certainty. The word is a member of a Wortsippe which also includes Keil "wedge", Kugel "ball, sphere" and Kiel "keel". No cognates of Kegel are known outside of German (other than loans from German in Dutch, Scandinavian as well as Baltic and Slavic languages). French quille seems to be a reflex of an Old Frankish form of the word. The German word Keil "wedge" is closely related, compared by Grimm to the relationship of Latin cuneus "wedge" with conus "cone". In some dialects, keil was used as the term for both "wedge" and "bowling pin". Also closely related is Kugel "ball, sphere". All these terms developed in context of the game of skittles. The relation of keil to kegel (both terms for the pin) was the same as that of kaule to kugel (both terms for the ball; the latter remained dialectal, while Kugel became the generic term for "sphere").

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

Kegel m (genitive Kegels, plural Kegel)

  1. skittle, ninepin, bowling pin; pin [13th century]
  2. any heap or peak of conical or pyramidal shape, especially of feces, hay, brushwood, of mountains and of the tip of a helmet [14th century]
  3. (mathematics) cone [18th century]
  4. (archaic) ruffian, knave; boy, youth; illegitimate son

Declension

See also

Further reading

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