German edit

 
Sonnenbrand auf menschlichen Händen
 
Sonnenbrand bei einem Riesling

Etymology edit

From Sonne (sun) +‎ -n- +‎ Brand (fire, burn). The word originally meant the burning heat of the sun. As such it was also commonly used in the context of sunburnt skin. However, the use of Sonnenbrand to refer this skin condition itself (meaning that one can “have a sunburn”, Sonnenbrand haben) seems to be a development of the 20th century.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈzɔnənˌbrant/, [ˈzɔnn̩ˌbʁant], [-nən-]
  • (file)

Noun edit

Sonnenbrand m (strong, genitive Sonnenbrandes or Sonnenbrands, plural Sonnenbrände)

  1. (uncountable, now rare, poetic) the burning heat of the sun
    Synonym: Sonnenglut
  2. (uncountable) sunburn (condition of the skin)
  3. (countable) a sunburn (instance of affliction with this condition)
  4. (uncountable, countable) sunburn, sunscald (burn on the tissue of crop plants or their fruits caused by excess exposure to the sun's rays)

Declension edit

Further reading edit