Krawall
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
German
Etymology
Unknown. Perhaps borrowed from Late Latin charavallium (“noise and clamor at a wedding”), or from Old French chalivali (“noise from pots and pans”) or charivali (compare French charivari), from Late Latin caribaria or Late Latin carivaria, ultimately from Ancient Greek καρηβάρεια (karēbáreia, “heaviness of the head, dizziness, headache”), from κάρη (kárē, “head”) and βαρύς (barús, “heavy”).
Pronunciation
Noun
Krawall m (strong, genitive Krawalles or Krawalls, plural Krawalle)
Declension
Declension of Krawall [masculine, strong]
1Now rare, see notes.
Derived terms
- Krawallbrüder
- Krawalltouristen
Further reading
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