Sandwich
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]The family name is from Old English Sandwiċæ, from sand + wīċ (“wick, settlement, harbour, hamlet”).
Proper noun
[edit]Sandwich
- A town and civil parish with a town council in Dover district, Kent, southeastern England, one of the historic Cinque Ports (OS grid ref TR3258). [1]
- An English habitational surname originating from this town.
- One of several younger towns named after the town in Kent or after a person bearing the surname:
- A city in DeKalb County and Kendall County, Illinois, United States.
- A town in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States.
- A town in Carroll County, New Hampshire, United States.
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]German
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from English sandwich.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]Sandwich n or (also in Germany) m (strong, genitive Sandwichs or Sandwiches or Sandwich, plural Sandwichs or Sandwiches or Sandwiche)
- sandwich (snack)
- Synonym: belegtes Brot
Usage notes
[edit]- The German word is commonly used only for more richly filled sandwiches, typically with salad and sauce, normally featuring toasted bread or a bread roll. Plainer variants with traditional German bread go by a variant of regional German names like Stulle. Variants with a bread roll often go simply by Brötchen (“bread roll”).
- The noun is generally neuter, but may be treated as masculine by some speakers.
- The inflected forms above are loosely ordered by frequency. The plural is usually Sandwiches in formal writing, but the two alternative plurals are equally frequent in common usage.
Declension
[edit]Declension of Sandwich [neuter // masculine (also in Germany), strong]
singular | plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
indef. | def. | noun | def. | noun | |
nominative | ein | das, der | Sandwich | die | Sandwichs, Sandwiches, Sandwiche |
genitive | eines | des | Sandwichs, Sandwiches, Sandwich | der | Sandwichs, Sandwiches, Sandwiche |
dative | einem | dem | Sandwich, Sandwiche1 | den | Sandwichs, Sandwiches, Sandwichen |
accusative | ein, einen | das, den | Sandwich | die | Sandwichs, Sandwiches, Sandwiche |
1Now rare, see notes.
Further reading
[edit]Plautdietsch
[edit]Noun
[edit]Sandwich f
Categories:
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English lemmas
- English proper nouns
- English uncountable nouns
- en:Towns in Kent, England
- en:Towns in England
- en:Civil parishes of England
- en:Places in Kent, England
- en:Places in England
- en:Cities in Illinois, USA
- en:Cities in the United States
- en:Places in Illinois, USA
- en:Places in the United States
- en:Towns in Massachusetts, USA
- en:Towns in the United States
- en:Places in Massachusetts, USA
- en:Towns in New Hampshire, USA
- en:Places in New Hampshire, USA
- German terms borrowed from English
- German terms derived from English
- German 2-syllable words
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German terms with audio links
- German lemmas
- German nouns
- German neuter nouns
- German masculine nouns
- German nouns with multiple genders
- Plautdietsch lemmas
- Plautdietsch nouns
- Plautdietsch feminine nouns