Obst |
1. n. fruit (food) | |
Heute esse ich nur Obst. - Today I only eat fruit. | |
2. n. cocaine | |
3. v. second-person present of obsen | |
4. v. third-person singular present of obsen | |
5. v. plural imperative of obsen | |
obsen |
1. v. (jargon) to keep (somebody, something) under surveillance, to surveil | |
Wuchs |
1. n. growth; growing | |
2. n. form; shape; build (the way something has grown) | |
3. v. first-person singular preterite of wachsen | |
4. v. third-person singular preterite of wachsen | |
wachsen |
1. v. to grow | |
2. v. to grow, to increase | |
3. v. to wax | |
im |
1. contraction. contraction of in dem ; in the | |
in |
1. prep. (with dative) in, inside, within, at (inside a building) | |
Es ist in dem Haus. - It is in the house. | |
Ich habe die Schlüssel im (in dem) Kühlschrank gefunden. - I found the keys in the refrigerator. | |
Unsere Kinder sind in der Schule. - Our kids are at school. | |
Er ist in einem Café. - He is at a coffee shop. | |
Letzte Nacht waren sie im (in dem) Club. - They were at the club last night. | |
2. prep. (with dative) in (pertaining to) | |
in diesem Sinne - in this/that sense | |
3. prep. (with dative) in, at, by (at the end of or during a period of time) | |
Er schloss sein Studium im Alter von vierzehn. - He completed his studies at/by the age of fourteen. | |
im Alter - in old age | |
im Mittelalter - during the middle ages | |
in den 1960er Jahren - in the 1960s | |
4. prep. (with accusative) into, to (going inside (of)) | |
Er geht ins Haus. - He goes into the house. | |
Wir gehen in die Schweiz. - We are going to Switzerland. | |
Wir treten in ein neues Zeitalter ein. - We are coming into a new age. | |
5. adj. in, popular (in fashion) | |
dem |
1. art. dative singular of der: the | |
2. pron. dative singular of der: to whom, to which | |
Garten |
1. n. garden, yard (grounds at the front or back of a house) | |
Wir sitzen im Garten. - We're sitting in the garden. | |
2. n. garden (outdoor area containing one or more types of plants, usually plants grown for food or ornamental purposes) | |
3. n. orchard (garden or an area of land for the cultivation of fruit or nut trees) | |
4. v. first-person plural preterite of garen | |
5. v. third-person plural preterite of garen | |
6. v. first-person plural subjunctive of garen | |
7. v. third-person plural subjunctive of garen | |
sowie |
1. conj. as well as | |
2. conj. as soon as | |
Gemüse |
1. n. vegetable; vegetables (kinds of plants) | |
Iss dein Gemüse! - Eat your vegetables! | |
2. n. a seasoned vegetable-based side dish, such as a relish (not necessarily pickled and not usually in the form of a paste) | |
Wir essen heute Hähnchenschnitzel mit Zwiebel-Möhren-Gemüse. - Today we’re having chicken cutlets with an onion and carrot relish. | |
und |
1. conj. (co-ordinating) and | |
Kaffee und Kuchen - coffee and cake | |
Ich kam, sah und siegte. - I came, saw, and conquered. | |
2. conj. (colloquial) links two nouns, often a person and an activity, in rhetoric questions to express an opposition between them | |
Er und Abwaschen? Vielleicht einmal im Jahr! - Him doing the dishes? Maybe once per year! | |
3. interj. so?, now?, and? | |
Und? Wie ist es gelaufen? - So? How did it go? | |
duftende |
1. adj. form of duftend | |
duftend |
1. Participle. present participle of duften | |
2. adj. fragrant, sweet (having a pleasant smell) | |
Blumen |
1. n. plural of Blume | |
Blume |
1. n-f. (botany) flower, blossom (colorful, conspicuous reproductive structure(s) of an angiosperm) | |
Insekten helfen Blumen bei der Reproduktion. - Insects help flowers reproduce. | |
Die breite Varietät an Blumensorten faszinierte die Menschen schon lange - The wide range of different kinds of flowers has fascinated man for ages. | |
2. n-f. (loosely colloquial usually in the plural) plant, houseplant (plant that is grown indoors in places such as a house or office for decorative purposes) | |
3. n-f. (chemistry) efflorescence (formation of a powdery surface on crystals) | |
4. n-f. (heraldry) flower (symbol representing a flower) | |
Blumen sind häufig ein Bestandteil von Symbolen auf Flaggen und Wappen - Flowers are often a building block of symbols on flags. | |
Die Blume, welche England symbolisiert, ist die rote Rose - The flower which symbolizes England is the red rose. | |
5. n-f. (hunting) tail, scut (short, erect tail of a hare) | |
6. n-f. nose, bouquet (scent of a particular wine) | |
7. n-f. , passage=Sehr zu unterscheiden ist die eigentliche Blume des Weins von mancher Trauben-Art, von dem sogenannten Bodengefährt, oder dem besondern anfänglich in der Regel unangenehmen Beigeschmack, wel | |
8. n-f. head (foam that forms on top of beer) | |