גוט
Appearance
Yiddish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Middle High German guot, from Old High German guot, from Proto-West Germanic *gōd, from Proto-Germanic *gōdaz. Compare German gut, English good, Dutch goed.
Pronunciation
[edit]- (YIVO, Northeastern) IPA(key): [ɡʊt]
- (Poylish) IPA(key): [ɡɪt]
- (Ukrainish) IPA(key): [ɡɨt]
Audio (Poylish): (file)
Adjective
[edit]גוט • (gut) (comparative בעסער (beser), superlative בעסט (best))
Declension
[edit]Declension of גוט
Antonyms
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]- אַ גוט יאָר (a gut yor), אַ גוטן טאָג (a gutn tog, “goodbye”)
- אַ גוטע וואָך (a gute vokh)
- אַ גוטע נאַכט (a gute nakht, “goodbye; goodnight”)
- גוט פֿאַרברענגען (gut farbrengen, “to have a good time”)
- גוט־יאָר (gut-yor, “hello”) (reply to any greeting beginning with גוט (gut))
- גוט־יום־טובֿ (gut-yontev, “hello”) (used on Jewish holidays)
- גוט־מאָרגן (gut-morgn, “good morning”)
- גוט־שבת (gut-shabes), גוט שבת (gut shabes, “hello”) (used on Saturday)
- גוטמוטיק (gutmutik, “good natured, benign”)
- גוטן־אָוונט (gutn-ovnt, “hello; good evening”)
Interjection
[edit]גוט • (gut)
- used to signal agreement with what was just said
Categories:
- Yiddish terms inherited from Middle High German
- Yiddish terms derived from Middle High German
- Yiddish terms inherited from Old High German
- Yiddish terms derived from Old High German
- Yiddish terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- Yiddish terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- Yiddish terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Yiddish terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Yiddish terms with IPA pronunciation
- Yiddish terms with audio pronunciation
- Yiddish lemmas
- Yiddish adjectives
- Yiddish interjections