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GERMAN LANGUAGE

German words you need to know: Der Tagedieb

Carpe diem - seize the day! Or … maybe you just don’t feel like it today. If that sounds all too familiar, then you may just want to add this word to your German vocabulary.

German words you need to know: Der Tagedieb
Sloths are the ultimate 'Tagediebe'. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/dpa-Zentralbild | Hendrik Schmidt

Der Tagedieb (or Tagdieb) is a compound word consisting of two nouns: Tag meaning ‘day’ and Dieb meaning ‘thief’. With this combination, an image of someone ‘stealing the day’ is perhaps rather difficult to conjure. This doesn’t quite fit the actual definition of Tagedieb, although you can see where it’s coming from. Der Tagedieb is in actual fact a pejorative term referring to a dawdler, someone who wastes the day.

So, this word constructs an image of someone ‘stealing’ otherwise productive, useful time in a day, for idleness. 

READ ALSO: German word of the day: Der Morgenmuffel

Although used more rarely now, the word has been in circulation since the 18th Century and can be seen in some of Goethe’s works, such as his travel report Italienische Reise (‘Italian Journey’). In the fourth volume of Johann Christoph Adelung’s 1801 German dictionary (Grammatisch-kritisches Wörterbuch der hochdeutschen Mundart), he describes a Tagedieb as someone stealing the days from God and time, instead passing them idly. 

If the term Tagedieb doesn’t quite do it for you, though, there are plenty of other options, including Müßiggänger (‘dallier’ or ‘idler’) and Nichtstuer (‘slacker’). So on that note, here’s your push to go ahead and seize (not steal) your day!

Examples:

Sie sind die Tagediebe.

They’re the dawdlers. 

Dein Bruder scheint mir ein ausgemachter Tagedieb zu sein.

Your brother seems to me to be an outright layabout.

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GERMAN WORD OF THE DAY

German word of the day: Aprilwetter

Sunshine one minute, snow the next - if the weather feels like it's lost its mind, this is a German word you'll want to have in your vocabulary.

German word of the day: Aprilwetter

Why do I need to know Aprilwetter?

Because this handy German idiom perfectly sums up the type of weather you’re bound to experience in Germany at this type of year – and if you want to try and make small-talk with Germans, talking about the weather is often a great place to start!

What does it mean?

Das Aprilwetter (pronounced like this) means exactly what it sounds like: weather that is typical in the month of April. In Germany, that tends to mean days that can change from sweltering heat to rainstorms in a matter of hours, or fluctuations between sun and snow on a weekly basis.

If you’ve noticed that you struggle to decide what clothes to wear each day this month, it could be that you’re experiencing the confusing phenomenon that is Aprilwetter. If you take a coat, you may not need it, but if you don’t, be prepared for a sudden hailstorm just after you leave the house.

A phrase that you can use with similar connotations is Frühlingswetter, which describes the changeable weather conditions that are typical in spring.

READ ALSO: German word of the day – Das Schmuddelwetter

The poet T.S. Eliot famously wrote, “April is the cruellest month”, as the temperamental weather we see at this time of year always seems to be particularly extreme.

If you’re struggling to describe weather that seems unable to decide whether it’s summer or winter, simply reach for the term Aprilwetter and every German will know exactly what you mean.

Use it like this:

Ich war nicht vorbereitet für dieses krasse Aprilwetter. Ich hätte eine Jacke mitnehmen sollen!

I wasn’t prepared for this extreme April weather. I should have brought a jacket with me!

Es gibt kein typisches Aprilwetter – zu diesem Jahreszeit sieht man alle Wetterarten unter der Sonne!

There’s no such thing as typical April weather – at this time of year you see all types of weather under the sun!

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