See also: lech and Lech

Luxembourgish edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German -lich, from Old High German -līh, from Proto-West Germanic *-līk.

Pronunciation edit

Suffix edit

-lech

  1. -like, -ly, -ous

Derived terms edit

Middle High German edit

Etymology edit

Often taken to derive from earlier -ech, -ehe (etc), from the Old High German collective suffix -ahi (German -ach, -ich, as in Kräuterich), with the origin of the -l- being unclear (some instances seem to be attested as early as Old High German, e.g. chrūtelīh, whence krûtelech). The suffix is found on singular as well as plural nouns, often with collective meaning but sometimes with diminutive meaning; in various dialects and descendants, it came to be treated as a plural of the diminutive suffix -l.[1] Sometimes connected to Old High German -līh (whence German -lich) instead.

Suffix edit

-lech

  1. (dialectal) suffix used to form singular and plural nouns with collective and diminutive meaning
    dingelich, krûtelech

Alternative forms edit

Descendants edit

  • (via one or more dialects) Yiddish: ־לעך (-lekh)
  • (several dialects) East Franconian: -lich
  • (around Tripitis [Vogtland]) -lich
  • (around Landau [Rheinpfalz]) -lich

References edit

  1. ^ Peter O. Müller, Substantiv-Derivation in den Schriften Albrecht Dürers, 1993, §II.1.4.21 (p. 378)

Further reading edit

  • Fritz Hastenpflug, Das Diminutiv in der deutschen Originalliteratur des 12. und 13. Jahrhunderts (1914)
  • Anthony R. Rowley, “Zur Pluralbildung in den Deutschen Dialekten: -ach-Plurale und Verwandte Erscheinungen im Oberdeutschen.” Zeitschrift für Dialektologie und Linguistik, vol. 61, no. 1, 1994, pp. 3–30. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/40504842
  • Gertraud Winkler, Die Wortbildung mit "-lich" im Alt-, Mittel- und Frühneuhochdeutschen (1995)