Plage - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From early Middle High German plāge, from Latin plāga (“blow, wound”). The word was originally chiefly Central German, therefore sometimes secondarily adapted to the Upper German consonantism as (later) Middle High German pflāge, which form did not last, however. More at plague.
Plage f (genitive Plage, plural Plagen)
- plague (affliction or hardship, particularly when seen as a divine punishment)
Sie ertrug alle Plagen des Krieges mit großer Tapferkeit.
- She endured all hardships of the war with great bravery.
Manche Menschen erachten Aids als Plage für die Unzüchtigen.
- Some people consider AIDS to be a plague for the lewd.
- plague; epidemic
- (informal) nuisance; annoyance; something annoying
- Synonym: Zumutung
Diese neuen Glühbirnen sind echt ’ne Plage.
- These new light bulbs are really annoying.
- German Plage does not refer specifically to the bubonic plague, for which use Pest.
- “Plage” in Duden online
Plage f (plural Plagen)