Yiddish edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German seigære (“scales”, later also “clock”), derived from Middle High German seigen (to weigh), possibly related to sīgen (to sink), from Proto-Germanic *sīganą. Alternatively seigen may be derived from Latin exagium. Compare obsolete German Seiger (clock), Polish zegar (clock). Compare also German Zeiger (hand of a clock), which is unrelated but may have contributed to the semantic development.

Noun edit

זייגער (zeygerm, plural זייגערס (zeygers), diminutive זייגערל (zeygerl)

  1. clock (instrument to measure or keep track of time)
  2. o'clock, time (used in telling time)

Derived terms edit