Yiddish edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from Middle High German stunt, stunde, from Old High German stunta, from Proto-West Germanic *stundu, from Proto-Germanic *stundō (point in time, hour). Appears twice in Levita's dictionary of 1542. Compare Alemannic German Schtund, German Stunde (hour), (archaic or poetic) Stund, Icelandic stund (hour; a while), Danish stund (a while). Doublet of שטונדע (shtunde, hour; private lesson)

Noun edit

שטונד (shtundf, plural שטונדן (shtundn)

  1. (Middle Yiddish) hour
  2. (Daytshmerish) hour
    Synonym: שעה (sho)

Derived terms edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Elia Levita (1542) Šěmôt děvārîm bilšôn ʿivrî u-bilšôn romiyyî gam aškenāzî [The Names of Things in Hebrew and Latin as well as German], Isny: Impressum Isnae [Paul Fagius], →DOI, Zentralbibliothek Zürich: Rv 209,3