zacken

See also: Zacken

German

Etymology

From Middle High German zacke, from Old High German *zacho, from Proto-Germanic *takkô (spike, prickle).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈt͡sa.kən], [ˈt͡sa.kŋ̩]
  • (file)

Verb

zacken (weak, third-person singular present zackt, past tense zackte, past participle gezackt, auxiliary haben)

  1. to provide with a jagged edge (e.g. by shaping or trimming)
    • 1982, Gudrun Embacher, Der Narr Wohlgemuth, Berg / Starnberger See: Hohenstaufen Verlag, →ISBN, page 186:
      Der Arno glänzte schaumig wie Opal, bald zerschmolz er zu milchigem Dunst, bald wieder gerann er zu dichtestem Flamingorot, Schichten von Halbedelstein waren übereinandergelegt, und ferne zackten Schneegipfel den Himmel; oh, ein Himmel ohne Drohung, ohne die ungeheure Wolkenwucht des Nordens, mild wie auf den Madonnenbildern eines Fra Angelico.
      The Arno shimmered foamy like opal, sometimes it melted into a milky haze, sometimes it coagulated again into the thickest flamingo red, layers of semiprecious stone were superimposed, and distant snow peaks jagged the sky; oh, a sky without threat, without the enormous cloud force of the north, mild as in the Madonna pictures by Fra Angelico.

Usage notes

Often as its past participle, gezackt (jagged).

Conjugation

Derived terms

Further reading

  • zacken” in Duden online
  • zacken” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
  • zacken” in Uni Leipzig: Wortschatz-Lexikon
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