Katze
German
Alternative forms
- Katz (chiefly in idioms)
- Katz'
Etymology
From Middle High German katze, Old High German kazza, from Proto-West Germanic *kattā, from Late Latin catta, feminine of cattus. Akin to Old English catt (“cat”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkatsə/ (most of Germany)
- IPA(key): /ˈkɑtːsə/ (Austro-Bavarian, Switzerland, regional Germany)
Audio (file) Audio (file) Audio (Austria) (file) - Rhymes: -atsə
- Hyphenation: Kat‧ze
Noun
Katze f (genitive Katze, plural Katzen, diminutive Kätzchen n or Kätzlein n, masculine männliche Katze or Kater, feminine weibliche Katze or Kätzin or Katerin)
Usage notes
Katze is the common term to refer to a cat (both male and female ones). The derived form Kätzin is mostly restricted to poetic language and technical language.
Declension
Hyponyms
(any cat):
Derived terms
- Bengalkatze
- Borneo-Goldkatze
- Cheshire-Katze
- die Katze aus dem Sack lassen
- Eichkatze
- Fischkatze
- Flachkopfkatze
- Graukatze
- Grinsekatze
- Hauskatze
- Havana-Katze
- ist die Katze aus dem Haus, tanzen die Mäuse auf dem Tisch
- Katz-und-Maus-Spiel
- Katzenauge
- Katzenfreund
- Katzenfutter
- Katzengold
- katzenhaft
- Katzenjammer
- Katzenjunges
- Katzenklappe
- Katzenklo
- Katzenminze
- Katzenrasse
- Katzensprung
- Katzenstreu
- Katzentür
- Katzenwelpe
- Katzenzunge
- Kleinfleckkatze
- Langschwanzkatze
- Marmorkatze
- Meerkatze
- Naschkatze
- neunschwänzige Katze
- Pampaskatze
- Perserkatze
- Rohrkatze
- Rostkatze
- Sandkatze
- Schrödingers Katze
- Schwarzfußkatze
- Siamkatze
- Stinkkatze
- Waldkatze
- Wildkatze
Further reading
- “Katze” in Duden online
- “Katze” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- Friedrich Kluge (1883) “Katze”, in John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891
Pennsylvania German
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