Brot
Central Franconian
Alternative forms
- Brut (Ripuarian, northern Moselle Franconian)
Etymology
From Middle High German and Old High German brot.
German
Alternative forms
- Brod (obsolete)
Etymology
From Middle High German brōt, from Old High German brōt (attested since the 8th century), from Proto-West Germanic *braud, from Proto-Germanic *braudą, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰrew- (“to seethe, to boil”).
Originally, the meaning of Brot was "what has been fermented, leaven" and may be a nominal derivative from Proto-Germanic *brewwaną (“to brew”) (whence German brauen). It replaced the older Laib (“loaf”) which was the more common term in Old High German (compare the use of hlāf and brēad in Old English).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bʁoːt/
audio (Germany) (file) audio (Germany) (file) audio (Austria) (file) - Rhymes: -oːt
- Hyphenation: Brot
- Homophone: Brod
Noun
Brot n (strong, genitive Brotes or Brots, plural Brote, diminutive Brötchen n)
- (usually uncountable) bread
- (countable) loaf of bread
- (countable) slice of bread; sandwich
- (uncountable, figurative) livelihood, subsistence
Declension
Hyponyms
- Bauernbrot
- Butterbrot
- Diabetikerbrot
- Dinkelbrot
- Dosenbrot
- Dreikornbrot
- Fettbrot
- Fladenbrot
- Fruchtbrot
- Früchtebrot
- Frühbrot
- Fünfkornbrot
- Gemüsebrot
- Graubrot
- Grobbrot
- Hefebrot
- Johannisbrot
- Kartoffelbrot
- Kastenweißbrot
- Knäckebrot
- Knoblauchbrot
- Kommissbrot
- Korn-an-Korn-Brot
- Körnerbrot
- Krustenbrot
- Kuchenbrot
- Kümmelbrot
- Landbrot
- Malzbrot
- Marzipanbrot
- Mehrkornbrot
- Milchbrot
- Mischbrot
- Nussbrot
- Osterbrot
- Passahbrot
- Roggenbrot
- Rosinenbrot
- Rundbrot
- Russischbrot
- Saatenbrot
- Schnittbrot
- Schüttelbrot
- Schwarzbrot
- Sechskornbrot
- Semmelbrot
- Sesambrot
- Sojabrot
- Sonnenblumenkernbrot
- Spezialbrot
- Stangenbrot
- Stangenweißbrot
- Steinofenbrot
- Toastbrot
- Toskanabrot
- Türkenbrot
- Vierkornbrot
- Vollkornbrot
- Vollkorntoastbrot
- Weißbrot
- Weizenbrot
- Zuckerbrot
- Zweikornbrot
- Zwiebelbrot
- Frühstücksbrot
- Honigbrot
- Jausenbrot
- Käsebrot
- Margarinebrot
- Marmeladenbrot
- Pausenbrot
- Schinkenbrot
- Schmalzbrot
- Schulbrot
- Vesperbrot
- Wurstbrot
- (livelihood): Gnadenbrot
Derived terms
- Abendbrot
- Affenbrot
- Affenbrotbaum
- Brotanschnitt
- Brotaufschnitt
- Brotaufstrich
- Brotbackautomat
- Brotbackmischung
- Brotbelag
- Brotbeutel
- Brötchen
- Broteinheit
- Brotfabrik
- Brotfrucht
- Brotgeber
- Brotgetreide
- Brotherr
- Brotherstellung
- Brotkammer
- Brotkanten
- Brotkasten
- Brotkorb
- Brotkrume
- Brotkrümel
- Brotkruste
- Brotlaib
- Brotmarke
- Brotmaschine
- Brotmesser
- Brotpreis
- Brotrezept
- Brotrinde
- Brotscheibe
- Brotschneidemaschine
- Brotschnitte
- Brotstück
- Brotstulle
- Brotsuppe
- Brotteig
- Brottoaster
- Brotzeit
- Butterbrot
- dumm wie Brot
- Gebröte
- Gnadenbrot
- Käsebrot
- Komissbrot
- Mischbrot
- Mittagsbrot
- Roggenbrot
- Vollkornbrot
- Weizenbrot
- Zuckerbrot
- Brotbitte
- Broterwerb
- brotlos
- Brotneid
- Brotstudium
- Brotverdiener
- Zubrot
Related terms
- brauen
- (livelihood): (unser) täglich Brot
- Zuckerbrot und Peitsche
References
- Wolfgang Pfeifer, editor (1993), “Brot”, in Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Deutschen (in German), 2nd edition, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, →ISBN
Further reading
- “Brot” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- “Brot” in Uni Leipzig: Wortschatz-Lexikon
- “Brot” in Duden online
- Brot on the German Wikipedia.Wikipedia de
- “Brot” in Deutsches Wörterbuch von Jacob und Wilhelm Grimm, 16 vols., Leipzig 1854–1961.
German Low German
Noun
Brot n
- (Mecklenburgisch, Low Prussian, Schleswig-Holsteinisch) Alternative form of Broot (“bread”)
- 2012, Silke Frakstein, Kannst keen Platt fehlt di wat, published by epubli GmbH in Berlin, inside the story "Hasenbrot????? Wat is dat denn ?"
- Hest Du vergeten, wat wi in de letzten Johren för'n Hunger harrn un wat Brot weert weer?
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 1859, Fritz Reuter, Läuschen un Rimels. Plattdeutsche Gedichte heiteren Inhalts in mecklenburgisch-vorpommerscher Mundart, 4th edition, published in Dresden by Max Fischer's Verlagsbuchhandlung, p. 118
- Wo is hir Botter up dat Brot?
- Note: In the 1st edition published by the author himself in Treptow an der Tollense in 1853 it's thus: "Doa is abs'lutemang doch goa / Kein Spierken Botte up dat Brodt." In the 6th edition published by the Hinstorff'sche Hofbuchhandlung in Wismar and Ludwigslust in 1864, it's "Wo is hir Botter up dat Brod?"
- 2012, Silke Frakstein, Kannst keen Platt fehlt di wat, published by epubli GmbH in Berlin, inside the story "Hasenbrot????? Wat is dat denn ?"
Derived terms
- Obendbrot, Awendbrot
- Botterbrot
- Brotke (Low Prussian)
- Brotmest
- Tobrot (Low Prussian)
Luxembourgish
Etymology
From Old High German brāto, from Proto-Germanic *brēdô. Cognate with German Braten, Dutch braad, Icelandic bráð.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bʀoːt/
Related terms
Pennsylvania German
Etymology
From Middle High German and Old High German brōt. Compare German Brot, Dutch brood, English bread.