Most German nouns of all genders that consist of one syllable will add -e at the end to form plurals. Some nouns will also have umlaut changes. Example 1: Here, the noun gains an -e at the end and the noun becomes plural instead of masculine. der Schuh(the shoe, singular) becomesdie...
other related terms: Schuhknecht (apprentice shoemaker); Nestler, Clausurmacher, Nüschenmacher, Senkler (shoelace maker); Leistenschneider (maker of lasts for shoemakers); Schuhputzer (shoe-shiner); Ortschmied, Pfriemenmacher (tool smith especially for shoemaker's awls etc.) Leather Trades saddl...
Böhse Onkelz= this is the correct but idiosyncratic spelling of the name of the German band (the correct plural would be "Onkel" without the z or an s, and "böse" for the correct German word for 'evil') "evil uncles," a term used in German as a euphemism for child molesters...
Abbreviations: adj. (adjective), n. (noun), pl. (plural), sing. (singular), sl. (slang), v. (verb) A B D E F G H J r joker (sl.) - sub who comes in and scores goals K Note: The nounder Kicker/die Kickerinin German refers to a soccer/football player, not just someone...
Abbreviations: adj. (adjective), n. (noun), pl. (plural), sing. (singular), sl. (slang), v. (verb) A B D E F G H J r joker (sl.) - sub who comes in and scores goals K Note: The nounder Kicker/die Kickerinin German refers to a soccer/football player, not just someone...