See also: bache, bâche, bâché, and Bäche

English edit

 
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Etymology edit

Proper noun edit

Bache

  1. A surname.
  2. A suburb of Chester, Cheshire West and Chester borough, Cheshire, England (OS grid ref SJ4068).

Further reading edit

Anagrams edit

German edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈbaxə/, [ˈba.χə]
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -aχə

Etymology 1 edit

From Middle High German bache, from Old High German bahha, which is derived from the masculine (etymology 2 below). Cognate with English back.

Noun edit

Bache f (genitive Bache, plural Bachen, masculine Keiler or Bacher)

  1. A wild sow, female wild boar
    • 2017, Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Mitsch, “Tiere und Strafrecht”, in Juristische Ausbildung, number 12, →DOI, page 1397:
      Auf nächtlicher Fahrt durch den Berliner Grunewald galoppiert dem Pkw-Fahrer F plötzlich eine Wildsau vor die Stoßstange. F kann den Zusammenstoß nicht vermeiden. Das Auto ist im Frontbereich zerbeult, die Bache ist tot.
      On a nightly ride through the Grunewald in Berlin suddenly a wild sow galopps right up to bumper of the car driver F. F cannot prevent the crash. The car is battered in the front-end, the sow is dead.
Declension edit
See also edit

Etymology 2 edit

From Middle High German bache, from Old High German bahho, strong-declension variant of Old High German bah, from Proto-West Germanic *bak.

Noun edit

Bache m (weak, genitive Bachen, plural Bachen)

  1. (dialectal, otherwise obsolete) bacon
Declension edit

References edit