Holz
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
First attested as Holtz around 1776. Derived from German Holz (“rising forest”). Compare Bocholtz.
See also Central Franconian De Hoots.
Holz n
From Middle High German holz, from Old High German holz, from Proto-West Germanic *holt, from Proto-Germanic *hultą. Compare English holt (“thicket, copse; an otter's den”).
Holz n (strong, genitive Holzes, plural Hölzer, diminutive Hölzchen n or Hölzlein n)
1Now rare, see notes.
From Old High German holz, from Proto-West Germanic *holt, from Proto-Germanic *hultą. Cognate with German Holz, Dutch hout, English holt, Icelandic holt.
Holz m (plural Hëlzer)
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