der |
1. art. the | |
2. art. feminine singular of der | |
3. art. genitive plural of der | |
4. pron. who; that; which | |
Ich kenne einen Mann, der das kann. - I know a man who can do that. | |
5. pron. feminine dative singular of der: (to) whom, which, that | |
6. pron. (attributive, stressed) that | |
Der Mann war es! - It was that man! | |
7. pron. (indicative) him, he | |
Der hat es getan! - It was him who did it! | |
8. pron. (differential) the one, him | |
Der mit dem Mantel - The one with the coat | |
9. pron. feminine dative singular of der: (to) that, (to) her | |
Hund |
1. n. dog, hound | |
2. n. (pejorative) scoundrel; dog (mean or morally reprehensible person) | |
ein gemeiner Hund - a mean dog | |
3. n. A board with casters used to transport heavy objects. | |
frisst |
1. v. second-person singular present of fressen | |
2. v. third-person singular present of fressen | |
fressen |
1. v. to eat; to feed on; to devour | |
2. v. to stuff oneself; to gorge oneself; to eat like a pig | |
Erst kommt das Fressen, dann kommt die Moral. - First comes the stomach, then comes ethics. | |
3. v. (figurative, chiefly reflexive) to eat away (e.g. metal) +preo, durch | |
4. v. (figurative, transitive,) to consume, to guzzle, to burn (e.g. fuel, money) | |
5. v. to despise, to have a pet peeve against | |
Den hab ich ja gefressen! - I have eaten that one. | |
eine |
1. num. feminine singular of ein | |
2. art. feminine singular of ein: a, an | |
3. pron. feminine singular of einer | |
4. pron. masculine nominative singular of einer | |
5. pron. singular of einer | |
Menge |
1. n-f. quantity | |
2. n-f. multitude | |
3. n-f. crowd, gathering of people | |
4. n-f. (mathematics) set | |
Fleisch |
1. n. flesh | |
2. n. meat | |
3. n. pulp (of fruit) | |
4. n. a slab of meat, meat which is not in the form of a sausage | |
jeden |
1. pron. masculine accusative singular of jeder | |
2. pron. singular of jeder | |
each |
|
Tag |
1. n. day (24-hour period) | |
Tag für Tag - day after day | |
2. n. day (period from midnight to the following midnight) | |
Der Tag fängt um Mitternacht an. - The day begins at midnight. | |
3. n. (astronomy) day (rotational period of a planet, moon or any celestial body (especially Earth)) | |
4. n. day, daylight (period between sunrise and sunset when there is daylight) | |
Im Winter sind die Tage kürzer. - During the winter the days are shorter. | |
Diese kurzen Tage verursachen Depressionen. - These short days cause feelings of depression. | |
An den irdischen Polen dauert ein Tag sechs Monate. - At the Earth's poles a day lasts about six months. | |
5. n. day, daylight, light (light from the Sun) | |
6. n. (figurative) light (open view; a visible state or condition) | |
7. n. day (part of a day which one spends at work, school, etc.) | |
Nun, wie war dein Tag? - Well, how was your day? | |
Überstunden!? Was für ein Tag! - Overtime!? What a day! | |
8. n. (figurative) day (specified time or period, considered with reference to the prominence or success (in life or in an an argument or conflict) of a person or thing) | |
Der Tag gehört uns. Gut gemacht, Männer! - It's our day, now. Well done, men! | |
Heute ist einfach nicht mein Tag. - It's just not my day. | |
9. n. (dated, now found chiefly in compounds such as Bundestag, Reichstag, Landtag, Sudetendeutscher Tag or Tag der Oberschlesier) convention, congress (formal assembly) | |
10. n. see Tage for plural-only senses | |
11. interj. (colloquial) hello; (good) day | |
12. v. singular imperative of tagen | |