The German word for pretzel is Brezel, and it means pretzel in German. It comes from Latin and originally was used as a kind of bread in Catholic traditions.
Brezel
It originated around 1815-1825 and comes from the German word Pretzel, a variant of Bretzel. In Old High German it was brizzila, which came from the Medieval Latin word bracellus, meaning "bracelet".
There is a Latin word Brachitellum meaning a baked biscuit. Later an Italian word Bracciatella, then a German word Brezitella which became Brezei and Prezel which became an Americanism, Pretzel
There is a Latin word Brachitellum meaning a baked biscuit. Later an Italian word Bracciatella, then a German word Brezitella which became Brezei and Prezel which became an Americanism, Pretzel
That would be "pretzel".
There is a phrase used to mean pretzel in Spanish, not just one word: Culin galleta salada en forma de lazo.
Bretzeln is the German version of a pretzel.
I presume that 'pretzel' has a druggies meaning, not those nice little German nibbles!
This pretzel is making me thirsty
I ate the pretzel with melted cheese.
there is no such word in German
greave is not a German word.