blatzeg

Luxembourgish

Etymology

The original meaning is “blear, bleary-eyed”, from Blatz (gound, sleepy dust) and blatzen (to be blear, goundy). Related dialectal forms show that the -a- in these words is (regularly) derived from an underlying -i-. Blatzen might hence be a doublet of blécksen (“to blink”, the natural reaction to dry eyes), from Bléck (look, glance), older also Black, here with the native vocalism preserved and with -cks--tz-, a fairly common development in High German.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈblɑtseχ/, [ˈblɑt͡səɕ]

Adjective

blatzeg (masculine blatzegen, neuter blatzegt, comparative méi blatzeg, superlative am blatzegsten)

  1. bleary-eyed, blear, having gound in one’s eyes
  2. pale, wan
  3. drab

Declension

Declension of blatzeg
singular plural
masculine feminine neuter
predicative hien ass blatzeg si ass blatzeg et ass blatzeg si si(nn) blatzeg
nominative /
accusative
attributive and/or after determiner blatzegen blatzeg blatzegt blatzeg
independent without determiner blatzeges blatzeger
dative after any declined word blatzegen blatzeger blatzegen blatzegen
as first declined word blatzegem blatzegem