"Wasser" is the term you are looking for.
The German word for water is Wasser,pronounced vass'err.A child would pronounce it like vassa.
water = Wasser
wasser
aqua-, aquatic-, aqui-, aqu-, -aquatically, aque-, -aqueousThose are actually Latin stems that mean "water." The actual Latin word for water is "aqua" (genitive: aquae, feminine gender).
Löschwasser
If WATER were a word in German, it would be pronounced WA ter (WA like WAter in English, and ter like ter rific in English - with the accent being on the first syllable). However, the word for water in German is WASSER, which is pronounced VAS ser (the A in VAS sounding the same as the A in WATER, and the ser sounding like the English word SIR). The accent for WASSER is on the first syllable.
"reines Wasser" is the translation.
It comes from the German word pudel, which is short for pudelhund, meaning to splash in the water in reference to the poodle being a water dog. As you would guess, pudelmeans puddle in English. :D Hope this helps! if it doesn't i don't Know what wil!
German "Pudel" , shortening of "Pudelhund" from Low German pudeln "splash in water" + German Hund "dog". So there's your answer.
The German word is 'pudlhund', from which we get the name 'poodle'. 'Pudl' means 'puddle' - poodles were bred to retrieve game from the water.
Chre is not a German word
This is an archaic German word (also spelled smelcz) meaning melt. The modern German word is schmelz from the verb schmelzen(e.g. Schmelzwasser - melt water), cognate with the modern English smelt.