schwul
See also: schwül
Dutch
Etymology
Adjective
schwul (not comparable)
- (Limburg) homosexual
Inflection
| Inflection of schwul | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| uninflected | schwul | |||
| inflected | schwule | |||
| comparative | — | |||
| positive | ||||
| predicative/adverbial | schwul | |||
| indefinite | m./f. sing. | schwule | ||
| n. sing. | schwul | |||
| plural | schwule | |||
| definite | schwule | |||
| partitive | schwuls | |||
German
Etymology
From German Low German schwul (“sultry, hot and humid”) (17th century), adopted into Standard German as schwül in the 18th century. The older form without umlaut appears in Berlin dialect in the 19th century in the current sense, building on the slang term warm (as in warmer Bruder) for ‘homosexual’. The earliest attestation of this sense dates to 1847 (Paul Derks).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃvuːl/
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Audio (file)
Adjective
schwul
- (colloquial) homosexual/gay (of males)
- (pejorative, slang) having effeminate or flamboyant qualities; fruity, queer, swishy
Derived terms
Derived terms
- Schwulenbar f
- Schwulenbewegung f
- Schwulenehe f
- Schwulendemonstration f
- Schwulengruppe f
- Schwulenlokal n
- Schwulenrechte n pl
- Schwulenszene f
- Schwulentreff m
- Schwuler m
- Schwulheit f
- Schwuli m
- Schwulsein sg
- stockschwul
Further reading
- schwul in Duden online
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