-sch
Dutch
editEtymology
editFrom Middle Dutch -sch.
Suffix
edit-sch
Usage notes
edit- Occasionally used in deliberately archaising language; e.g. a product marketed to appeal to a sense of nostalgia may use a spelling such as Hollandsch instead of Hollands.
- In some cases this archaising usage extends even to words ending in -s today which historically did not end in -sch at all. For example, some university sororities may include the word damesch (from dames, plural of dame (“lady”)): a completely made-up archaism, as the plural marker -s historically was never spelled -sch.
German
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editContraction of -isch.
Pronunciation
editSuffix
edit-sch
- A suffix attached to names to produce eponymous adjectives: -ean, -ian, 's
- die Boolesche/boolesche Algebra ― Boolean algebra
Usage notes
edit- Words in -sch inflect like normal adjectives.
- While the name generally remains capitalised with the spelling -'sch, it may alternatively be lowercased without the apostrophe (provided that the adjective is neither nominalised nor part of a fixed term).
Derived terms
editMiddle Dutch
editEtymology
editFrom Old Dutch -isc, from Proto-Germanic *-iskaz.
Suffix
edit-sch
Alternative forms
editDescendants
editCategories:
- Dutch terms inherited from Middle Dutch
- Dutch terms derived from Middle Dutch
- Dutch lemmas
- Dutch suffixes
- Dutch adjective-forming suffixes
- Dutch archaic forms
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German lemmas
- German suffixes
- German adjective-forming suffixes
- German terms with usage examples
- Middle Dutch terms inherited from Old Dutch
- Middle Dutch terms derived from Old Dutch
- Middle Dutch terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Middle Dutch terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Middle Dutch lemmas
- Middle Dutch suffixes
- Middle Dutch adjective-forming suffixes