Mehrzahl von mund
Hier gibt es nur zwei Formen: Maskuline und neutrale Substantive benutzen im Nominativ den Artikel ein. Ist ein Substantiv feminin, ist eine der richtige Artikel. Es heißt also ein Mund. Was .Mund
See also:mundandmund'
German
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle High Germanmunt, from Old High Germanmund, from Proto-West Germanic*munþ, from Proto-Germanic*munþaz, from Proto-Indo-European*men-.
Cognate with Low GermanMund, Dutchmond, Englishmouth, Danishmund.
Noun
Mund m (strong, genitiveMundesorMunds, pluralMünder, diminutiveMündchen norMündlein n)
- mouth of a person
Declension
Declension of Mund [masculine, strong]
Derived terms
See also
Etymology 2
From an earlier Munt, from Middle High German and Old High Germanmunt, from Proto-Germanic*mundō.
The retention of /d/ in the combination /nd/ is a signature of northern High German dialects and only becomes widespread after a period in the Middle Ages where the southern reflex /nt/ is favoured in southern writings.
Noun
Mund f (genitiveMund, pluralMunde)
- (obsolete)hand
- (obsolete)legalprotection
Usage notes
- Due to conflation with the masculine noun, combined nouns based on this one are also masculine.
See also
Further reading
Hunsrik
Etymology
From Middle High Germanmunt, from Old High Germanmund, from Proto-West Germanic*munþ, from Proto-Germanic*munþaz, from Proto-Indo-European*men-.
Pronunciation
Noun
Mund m (pluralMunde, diminutiveMundche)
- mouth