Zeichen

German

Etymology

  • From Middle High German zeichen, from Old High German zeihhan (sign, symbol), from Proto-Germanic *taikną, *taiknaz (sign), from Proto-Indo-European *deyḱ- (to show). Cognate with Dutch teken, Low German Teiken, English token, Danish tegn, Swedish tecken.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈt͡saɪ̯çən/, [-çn̩], [-xn̩] (Germany)
      • Audio (Germany (Berlin)):(file)
    • IPA(key): /ˈt͡saɪ̯çɛn/, [-ˌt͡saɛ̯-], [-xn̩], [-xŋ̩] (Austria, Southern Germany, Switzerland)
    • Rhymes: -aɪçən
    • Hyphenation: Zei‧chen

    Noun

    Zeichen n (strong, genitive Zeichens, plural Zeichen, diminutive Zeichlein n or Zeichelchen n)

    1. sign, token (object representing something)
      Sie gab mir ihr Taschentuch als Zeichen ihrer Liebe.
      She gave me her handkerchief as a token of her love.
    2. signal (gesture, command or other indication to announce or alert)
    3. sign, indication (fact that reveals an underlying state)
      Synonym: Anzeichen
      Der Einstellungsstopp ist ein Zeichen, dass es der Firma nicht gut geht.
      The hiring freeze is a sign that the company isn't doing well.
    4. sign, mark (glyph that communicates something)
    5. (typography) character
    6. (religion) sign, miracle, prodigy

    Declension

    Hyponyms

    Derived terms

    compound nouns

    Further reading