See also: melk

English

edit

Proper noun

edit
 
English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Melk

  1. A city in Austria, in the federal state of Lower Austria, known as the site of a massive baroque Benedictine monastery.

Translations

edit

Anagrams

edit

German

edit
 
German Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia de

Etymology

edit

First mentioned in 831 as Medilica, said to be of Slavic origin and meaning "border" (compare Proto-Slavic *meďa (boundary, border)).[1]

Pronunciation

edit

Proper noun

edit

Melk n (proper noun, genitive Melks or (optionally with an article) Melk)

  1. A municipality of Lower Austria, Austria

Proper noun

edit

die Melk f (proper noun, usually definite, definite genitive der Melk)

  1. A river in Lower Austria, Austria

References

edit
  1. ^ Johannes Binder, Travelling on the Danube (DDSG, 1987), p. 112.

German Low German

edit
 
Low German Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nds

Etymology

edit

From Middle Low German melik, from Old Saxon miluk, from Proto-West Germanic *meluk.

Cognate to English milk (which has a larger etymology section), Dutch Low Saxon melk, Dutch melk, Norwegian Bokmål melk, mjølk, German Milch.

Noun

edit

Melk

  1. (in some dialects, including Low Prussian) milk