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Silber in German is neuter gender, so it's das Silber.If something is silver then in German it is silbern
Silber
Little fox translates as kleiner Fuchs.
argentumThe word "silver" does not come from Latin, where the word is argentum. There is speculation that the word ultimately derives from the Akkadian word for refined silver, ̣̣̣̣̣̣̣̣sarpu. Related words can be found throughout the Germanic and Balto-Slavic group of languages, which developed side-by-side in Northern Europe: German Silber, Dutch zilver, Russian serebo, Lithuanian sidabras.The Latin word for silver is argentum.Argentina comes from the Latin word for silver, argentum.
I think it comes from the word germen.
"Nein" It is pronounced like the number nine.
Sunne is not a German word. The closest word is Sonne, which means Sun.
The word 'ausles' translated from German means 'be read out'
It probably ultimately comes from an Akkadian root word sarapu meaning to refine or smelt, but no one is really certain. The metal has been called by a name vaguely resembling "silver" in a large variety of northern and eastern European languages. Examples: German silber, Dutch zilver, Russian serebro.
The abbreviation for the word "speaking" is "spkg."
The Swedish word for 'silver' is silver.
The word silver comes from proto-Germanic *silubra-which itself probably comes from a common Germanic/Balto-Slavic term for the metal. We're not quite sure what that word was, but most Germanic, Baltic, and Slavic languages have words for silver that are clearly related to each other: Dutch zilver, German silber, Russian serebro, Polish srebro, Lithuanian sidabras. Contrast these with the Romance languages, where the word for silver is clearly not closely related to the earlier words: Latin argentum, French argent, Italian argento, Romanian argint, Spanish plata(your guess is as good as mine on that one).The Germanic/Balto-Slavic word may have originated with Akkadian sarpu "refined silver" from sarapu "to refine or smelt."Silver (the metal) has been known for a very long time, so the names for it go back a long way.