Schacht

See also: schacht

German

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle Low German schacht, from Old Saxon skaft, from Proto-Germanic *skaftaz. Doublet of Schaft.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʃaxt/
  • (file)

Noun

Schacht m (genitive Schachts or Schachtes, plural Schächte)

  1. shaft, mineshaft (tunnel)

Declension

  • Abwasserschacht
  • Bergbauschacht
  • Betonschacht
  • Bodenschacht
  • Brunnenschacht
  • Erdschacht
  • Fahrstuhlschacht
  • Grubenschacht
  • Heizungsschacht
  • Kabelschacht
  • Kanalschacht
  • Lichtschacht
  • Luftschacht
  • Lüftungsschacht
  • Mauerschacht
  • Schachtanlage
  • Schachtaushub
  • Schachtbreite
  • Schachtdeckel
  • Schachtdurchmesser
  • Schachtlänge
  • Schachtöffnung
  • Schachtschließung
  • Schachttiefe
  • Schachtverbreiterung
  • Schachtvertiefung
  • Schachtzuschüttung
  • Schornsteinschacht
  • Straßenschacht
  • Treppenschacht
  • Tunnelschacht
  • Ventilationsschacht
  • Wetterschacht

Descendants

Further reading


German Low German

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle Low German schacht, from Old Saxon skaft, from Proto-Germanic *skaftaz. Cognate with Dutch Low Saxon skacht, Plautdietsch Schajcht (legging), English shaft, Swedish skaft and German Schaft. The sense "beating" is from the canes which were used to beat misbehaving pupils in 19th-century schools.

Pronunciation

  • (northern German Low German) IPA(key): [ʃaxt]
  • (Westphalia, Eastphalia, eastern Frisia) IPA(key): [skaxt]
  • (Westphalia) IPA(key): [sxaxt]

Noun

Schacht m

  1. (in several dialects, including Low Prussian) a shaft, a pole to which something is attached
    1. (in some dialects, including Low Prussian) a stalk (e.g. a beanstalk)
  2. (in some dialects, including Low Prussian) a cane, a stick
  3. (in several dialects, including Low Prussian, by extension, used without article) a beating
    Ik hebbe Schacht kręgen.
    I have been beaten. (literally: I have gotten [the] shaft.)
  4. (in several dialects) a shaft, a tunnel driven vertically into the ground
  5. (in several dialects, including Low Prussian) a bootleg, the part of a boot which covers the shin and calf

Synonyms

  • (shaft): Schecht
  • (bootleg): Schecht
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