Woge

See also: woge and wöge

German

Etymology

With dialectal -ā--ō- from northern Middle High German wāge (wave), borrowed from Middle Low German wāge (wave). The latter form could be a mere alteration of the rare masculine Middle Low German wāch (stormy sea), from Old Saxon wāg (stormy sea), from Proto-Germanic *wēgaz (which see for cognates). However, the feminine may also go back to an unattested Old Saxon *waga (with a short vowel), from Proto-Germanic *wagō (or similar), related with Proto-Germanic *wagjaną (to move, shake). The evidence for this is Middle High German wage (movement, shaking), from Old High German waga (movement). In Middle Low German and Middle Dutch, this feminine noun would have widely merged with the aforementioned wāch, wāg per open-syllable lengthening.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈvoːɡə/
  • (file)
  • (file)

Noun

Woge f (genitive Woge, plural Wogen)

  1. (chiefly literary) wave

Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms

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