/ˈfɛsl̩/ <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> f (genitive <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span>, plural Fesseln) fetter, shackle pastern Declension of <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> [feminine] ^ Wolfgang Pfeifer, editor (1993), “<span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span>”, in...
See also: <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> <span class="searchmatch">fessel</span> inflection of fesseln: first-person singular present singular imperative <span class="searchmatch">fessel</span> alternative form of vessel...
From Proto-Germanic *fatilaz, whence also Old English fetel, Old Norse fetill. fezzil f fetter German: <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span>...
Fuß + <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> IPA(key): /ˈfuːsˌfɛsl̩/ Hyphenation: Fuß‧fes‧sel Fußfessel f (genitive Fußfessel, plural Fußfesseln) foot shackle Declension of Fußfessel...
German veʒʒeren, from Old High German feʒʒarōn. Synchronically analyzed as <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> (“fetter, shackle”) + -n. IPA(key): [ˈfɛsl̩n], [ˈfɛsəln] Hyphenation: fes‧seln...
German Wikipedia has an article on: Fesselballon Wikipedia de From <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> (“fetter, shackle”) + Ballon (“balloon”). IPA(key): [ˈfɛsl̩baˌlɔŋ] Rhymes: -ɔŋ...
chain, shackle, fetter (chain used to bind a person or animal) Synonym: <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> (figurative) chain, series (number of following items or events) Synonyms:...
pagl, Votic paglõ), borrowed from Proto-Germanic *fatilaz (compare German <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span>). IPA(key): /ˈpɑu̯lɑ/, [ˈpɑ̝u̯lɑ̝] Rhymes: -ɑulɑ Syllabification(key): pau‧la...
sense of “bond” and in the poetic meaning “shackles” (for which usually <span class="searchmatch">Fessel</span> is used). In early modern German, the two plurals were widely interchangeable...