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Webster 1913 Edition
Haut
Definition 2024
Haut
Haut
German
Noun
Haut f (genitive Haut, plural Häute, diminutive Häutchen n)
- skin, hide of a person, animal or (part of a) plant
- 1924, Thomas Mann, Der Zauberberg (Berlin: S. Fischer, 1929), p. 346:
- "Von der Haut? Interessieren Sie sich für Physiologie?"
- About the skin? You're interested in physiology?
- 1924, Thomas Mann, Der Zauberberg (Berlin: S. Fischer, 1929), p. 346:
- (by extension, metonymically) a creature, especially a person
-
brave Haut
- brave person
-
brave Haut
- skin (membrane found on the surface of an object, like a sausage)
Declension
Synonyms
Derived terms
- auf der faulen Haut liegen
- dünnhäutig
- häuten
- Hautfarbe
- Hautrötung
- Hautausschlag
- Gänsehaut
- Apfelsinenhaut
- Schrumpelhaut
See also
Luxembourgish
Etymology
From Old High German hūt, from Proto-Germanic *hūdiz, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keu-.
Pronunciation
Noun
Haut f (plural Hait)
haut
haut
English
Adjective
haut (comparative more haut, superlative most haut)
- (obsolete) Haughty.
- Nations proud and haut. — Milton.
French
Etymology
From Middle French hault, from Old French haut, halt (“high, tall, elevated”), a conflation of Frankish *hauh, *hōh (“high, tall, elevated”) and Latin altus (“high, raised, profound”). Akin to Old High German hōh (“high, tall, elevated”). More at high, haughty.
Pronunciation
Adjective
haut m (feminine singular haute, masculine plural hauts, feminine plural hautes)
Adverb
haut
Noun
haut m (plural hauts)
Usage notes
- The aspirated, or Germanic, h precludes elision: la haute cuisine.
Derived terms
Related terms
Anagrams
German
Verb
haut
- Second-person plural present of hauen.
- Third-person singular present of hauen.
- Imperative plural of hauen.
Hunsrik
Etymology
From Old High German hūt, from Proto-Germanic *hūdiz, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)keu-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /haʊ̯t/
Noun
haut
- skin; hide
- 2008, Ursula Wiesemann, Contribuição ao desenvolvimento de uma ortografia da língua Hunsrik falada na América do Sul, Associação Internacional de Lingüística – SIL Brasil, page 30:
- praut, kaul, haut – noiva, cavalo, pele
- bride, horse, skin – bride, horse, skin
- (note: the words right of the hyphen are in Portuguese)
- praut, kaul, haut – noiva, cavalo, pele
- 2008, Ursula Wiesemann, Contribuição ao desenvolvimento de uma ortografia da língua Hunsrik falada na América do Sul, Associação Internacional de Lingüística – SIL Brasil, page 30:
Latin
Alternative forms
Adverb
haut (not comparable)
- Alternative spelling of haud
References
- haut in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- haut in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- Félix Gaffiot (1934), “haut”, in Dictionnaire Illustré Latin-Français, Paris: Hachette.
Luxembourgish
Etymology
Probably from Old High German (*)hiudu, northern variant of hiutu, though the vocalism is irregular. Similar forms exist in many Moselle Franconian dialects alongside regular forms. Cognate with German heute.
Pronunciation
Adverb
haut
Related terms
Norman
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Old French hault, haut, halt (“high, tall, elevated”), a conflation of Frankish *hauh, *hōh (“high, tall, elevated”) and Latin altus (“high, raised, profound”).
Adjective
haut m
Alternative forms
- haout (Guernsey)
Derived terms
- haute tchaîse (“highchair”)
Etymology 2
Noun
haut ? (plural hauts)
Alternative forms
- haû (Jersey)
- ĥa (France)