der See
noun · /zeː/ ·Etymology
From Middle High German sê, from Old High German sē, sēo m (“sea”), from Proto-West Germanic *saiwi m (“sea”), from Proto-Germanic *saiwiz m (“sea”). Compare Low German See (“sea, lake”), Dutch zee f (“sea”), English sea, Danish sø c (“sea, lake”).
Translation
-
lake
masculine, mixed
Dieser See ist sehr klein.
This lake is very small.
"Görlitzer Park", Berliner Zeitung, November 11, 2013. Auf 14 Hektar gibt es unter anderem einen Kinderbauernhof, mehrere Sport-, Spiel- und Bolzplätze, zwei Aussichtsberge und einen kleinen See.
There are, among other things, a petting zoo, multiple sporting facilities, playing grounds and soccer fields, two overlooks and a small lake on 14 hectares.
Declension
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | See | Seen |
| Accusative | See | Seen |
| Dative | See | Seen |
| Genitive | Sees | Seen |