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English
Etymology
Compare German Spalt (“stein”), from spalten (“to split”).
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
Noun
spalt (uncountable)
- Spelter.
Adjective
spalt (comparative more spalt, superlative most spalt)
- (of wood) Brittle.
- Note: (US) Spalted wood is that which has been cut from a naturally cured, dead, or dying hardwood tree whose wood is normally light in color (such as pecan), and which exhibits patterns of dark stain (crazed) lines and splotches caused by microorganisms and/or fungus. Although slightly more brittle and porous than normal wood from the same species of tree, spalted wood nevertheless can be used to make decorative items and small pieces of furniture.
1772, William Ellis, Husbandry, Abridged:a brittle, spalt wood
- Heedless; clumsy; pert; saucy.
Verb
spalt (third-person singular simple present spalts, present participle spalting, simple past and past participle spalted)
- (transitive, intransitive) To break off pieces, or have them broken off, especially with an axe etc; to splinter.
- Synonym: spall
Anagrams
German
Pronunciation
Verb
spalt
- singular imperative of spalten
Norwegian Bokmål
Verb
spalt
- imperative of spalte
Old High German
Etymology
Related to Lombardic spalt (“crack, fissure”); see modern German spalten (“to cleave”).
Noun
spalt m
- crack, fissure
Descendants
Further reading
Swedish
Etymology
Used in Swedish since 1657, same as Danish spalte, from German Spalte, based on the verb spalten (“to split”), related to Swedish spjäll, spilla, spillra
Noun
spalt c
- a (long and narrow) gap
- a column (of text)
- a (recurring) section with certain contents in a paper or magazine; a column
Declension
Synonyms
Derived terms
See also
References
Anagrams