/diχt/, [diɕt]
OriginFrom Middle High German dīhte, from Old High German dīhti, from Proto-West Germanic *þį̄ht(ī), from Proto-Germanic *þinhtaz.
The variant diicht is inherited; the form with a short vowel is influenced by German dicht, itself influenced by Middle Low German dicht (alongside obsolete German deicht). Cognate with Dutch dicht, English tight.
- dense
- impermeable; watertight
- form-of, indicative, present, singular, third-personthird-person singular present indicative
- form-of, indicative, plural, present, second-personsecond-person plural present indicative
- form-of, imperative, plural, second-person, singularsecond-person singular/plural imperative
Formsdichten(masculine) · dicht(neuter) · méi dicht(comparative) · am dichtsten(superlative) · diicht(alternative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0