das Fieber
noun · /ˈfiːbər/ ·Etymology
From Middle High German fieber, from Old High German fiebar, from Proto-West Germanic *fēbr, borrowed from Latin febris (“fever”).
Translation
-
fever (heightened body temperature)
neuter, strong
Paul ist krank, er hat Fieber.
Paul is sick, he's got a fever.
- vigour, confidence figuratively, neuter, strong
- fever, bug (obsession for an activity) figuratively, in-compounds, neuter, strong
Declension
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | Fieber | Fieber |
| Accusative | Fieber | Fieber |
| Dative | Fieber | Fiebern |
| Genitive | Fiebers | Fieber |