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GERMAN WORD OF THE DAY

Brückentag, Fenstertag and Zwickeltag: All the German words for getting longer holiday weekends

German has more than one special word for the practice of taking a day off to make the most out of public holidays that fall close to a weekend. But which word should you use? That depends a bit on where you are.

Road trip
Photo by Hendrik Morkel on Unsplash

People in German-speaking countries take their holidays seriously and the language reflects that. If a holiday falls around a weekend, German speakers might take a day – or a couple of days – off work to bridge the gap between the holiday and the next weekend.

If a public holiday falls on a Tuesday or Thursday, they might take the corresponding Monday or Friday off work in order to get a four-day weekend by using up just one day of vacation time. In German-speaking countries it’s also common to book time off in the four days before Good Friday, or the four days off after Easter Monday, in order to get almost ten-days off by only using up four vacation days.

Easter also presents a great opportunity for some people to use eight vacation days – four on each side of the Easter weekend if they have Friday and Monday off – to get a full 16-day holiday.

READ ALSO: ‘Bridge days’: How to maximise public holidays like a German this May

Whether it’s Brückentag — or “bridge day” — Fenstertag, or “window day” — or even Zwickeltag (more on that below), the fact that there are multiple special German words for this practice should tell you how seriously people in German-speaking countries take this tradition.

Bridge or window?

Brückentag is best used in both Germany and in German-speaking Switzerland, but not typically in Austria.

Some German speakers in these countries will use it a bit more restrictively – and keep its meaning purely as a “bridge” day between the weekend and a public holiday that falls in the middle of the week rather than on a Friday or Monday. Because Easter falls on both Friday and Monday, certain German speakers won’t describe extra days off around Easter as “bridge days.”

The Landwasserviadukt in Filisur, Switzerland.

The Landwasserviadukt in Filisur, Switzerland. Photo by Pascal Debrunner on Unsplash

The latest such opportunity to use such a bridge day is on May 10th for Ascension Day – a public holiday in both Germany and Switzerland that falls on a Thursday. Taking the Friday off the next day would count as a Brückentag.

READ ALSO: German word of the day: Der Brückentag

No one knows precisely why, but Brückentag hasn’t taken off in Austria, with German speakers in the alpine country using Fenstertag. The “window day,” however, means essentially the same thing – and might refer to “open windows” in the middle of the week. While many Austrian German speakers are likely to understand what you mean if you use Brückentag there, using Fenstertag is at least likely to demonstrate that you’re familiar with some Austrian lingo.

READ ALSO: German word of the day: Der Fenstertag

What exactly is Zwickeltag?

While Fenstertag works in much of Austria – and certainly in Vienna – one Austrian region has yet another word of its own. As a Zwickel describes a wedge-shaped piece that holds together things coming together at a focal point — for example, fabric at the crotch of a pair of jeans — Zwickeltag is used in Upper Austria.

The region, with its capital in Linz and sharing a border with the German state of Bavaria, uses its own word for the beloved holiday tradition, although people there are still likely to understand either Brückentag or Fenstertag. Zwickeltag is quite specific to Upper Austria though, with perhaps even native Austrians from other parts of the country not always aware of it — to say nothing of either Germans or Swiss Germans.

Examples

The “bridge day” words are pretty easy to use in a sentence, as they’re standard nouns, with the singular form being masculine. You might ask someone “Are you taking the bridge days off at Easter?” In Germany and German-speaking Switzerland, you would say:

Nimmst du sich die Brückentage um Ostern frei? 

Or in Austria you might ask someone “Are you taking a bridge day off for Easter?” Here you would say:

Nimmst du sich am Ostern einen Fenstertag frei? 

Or in Upper Austria, you would just switch out the word like so:

Nimmst du sich am Ostern einen Zwickeltag frei? 

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GERMAN WORD OF THE DAY

German word of the day: Dudelsack

This hilarious sounding German word describes something quintessentially Scottish.

German word of the day: Dudelsack

Why do I need to know Dudelsack?

In the run-up to the German v Scotland opening match of Euro 2024, there were a lot of these gracing the streets of Munich. More importantly, why wouldn’t you want to know a word like Dudelsack?

Just say the word aloud and it will brighten your day. 

What does it mean?

Dudelsack (pronounced like this) is one of those German words that’s both charmingly literal and somewhat onomatopoeic, describing a big bag or sack that makes a ‘doodling’ kind of noise: in other words, the bagpipes.

As well as sounding like the noise this traditional Scottish instrument makes, dudeln also translates as ‘to drone’, and anyone who’s heard the bagpipes will know that this is also a fairly accurate description of how they sound. 

READ ALSO: 10 German words with hilarious literal translations

As Scotland geared up to play Germany in the opening match of Euro 2024 in Munich, many sacks were doodled in the Bavarian capital. 

Seeing parades of kilts and hearing the distinctive wail of the Dudelsack against the backdrop of Munich’s gothic town hall isn’t something you experience every day, and we’re sure it’s an experience the people of Munich also won’t forget for a while. 

Use it like this: 

Hör mal auf, Dudelsack zu spielen! Es geht mir auf die Nerven.

Stop playing the bagpipes! It’s getting on my nerves.  

Weißt du, wie der Dudelsack klingt? Man hört ihn überall in Schottland.

Do you know what the bagpipes sound like? You can hear them everywhere in Scotland. 

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