Schmier
German edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Yiddish שמירה (shmire), from Hebrew שמירה (šəmīrā, “guard”). Compare Schmiere stehen.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
Schmier f (genitive Schmier, plural Schmieren)
Declension edit
Hunsrik edit
Etymology edit
Deverbal from Middle High German smirn, smirwen. Equivalent to German Schmiere. Compare also German Schmer, English smear.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
Schmier f (plural Schmiere)
Derived terms edit
- Keesschmier (quark cheese)
Related terms edit
- schmeere (to spread)
Descendants edit
References edit
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The template Template:R:hrx:Boll does not use the parameter(s):
1=Schmier
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Piter Kehoma Boll (2021) “Schmier”, in Dicionário Hunsriqueano Riograndense–Português [Riograndenser Hunsrickisch–Portuguese Dictionary][1] (in Portuguese), 3 edition, Ivoti: Riograndenser Hunsrickisch, page 89 - ^ The template Template:R:Altenhofen 1990 does not use the parameter(s):
1=Schmier
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Cléo Vilson Altenhofen (1990) A aprendizagem do português em uma comunidade bilíngüe do Rio Grande do Sul: um estudo de redes de comunicação em harmonia.[2] (overall work in Portuguese), Porto Alegre: UFRGS, page 215 - ^ The template Template:R:Altenhofen 2007 does not use the parameter(s):
1=Schmier p=84
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Cléo Vilson Altenhofen, Jaqueline Frey, Maria Lidiani Käfer, Mário Silfredo Klassmann, Gerson Roberto Neumann, Karen Pupp Spinassé (2007 November) “Fundamentos para uma escrita do Hunsrückisch falado no Brasil”, in Contingentia[3], volume 2, number 2 (overall work in Portuguese), Porto Alegre, pages 73–87
Luxembourgish edit
Etymology edit
Deverbal from Middle High German smirn, smirwen, from Old High German smirwen, from Proto-West Germanic *smirwijan (“to smear”).
Equivalent to German Schmiere. Compare also German Schmer, English smear.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
Schmier f (plural Schmieren)
Pennsylvania German edit
Etymology edit
Deverbal from Middle High German smirn, smirwen, from Old High German smirwen, from Proto-West Germanic *smirwijan (“to smear”).
Equivalent to German Schmiere. Compare also German Schmer, English smear.
Noun edit
Schmier f (plural Schmiere)