See also: Kahl

German edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German kal (inflected kalwe), from Old High German kalo, chalo, from Proto-Germanic *kalwaz (naked, bald), from Proto-Indo-European *gelH- (naked, bald). The form kahl (instead of *kalb) is based on the Middle High German uninflected stem. However, the lengthened vowel points to influence by varieties that reduce -lw- to -l- even in open syllables; these include Middle Low German kāl (inflected kāle). See the same development in fahl. Cognate with Dutch kaal, English callow, and further Italian calvo, Russian голый (golyj, nude), Persian کل (kal), Romanian chel.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

kahl (strong nominative masculine singular kahler, comparative kahler, superlative am kahlsten)

  1. bald, hairless
  2. (figurative, of land etc.) barren, bleak, empty, stark, bland

Usage notes edit

  • Now used chiefly in the figurative sense or of portions of the skin: eine kahle Stelle (a bald spot). Of persons one more commonly says kahlköpfig or glatzköpfig (both literally "bald-headed"). Even more usual is the expression eine Glatze haben (literally to have a bald head).

Declension edit

Further reading edit

  • kahl” in Duden online
  • kahl” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache