[已刪除]
About saying 'bald' in German? Is there an adjective that means 'bald' in German? When I started looking at describing peoples appearances in German, today, the sentence shown for "I am bald" was "Ich habe eine Glatze.". Similarly, Who is bald?" was shown as " Wer hat eine Glatze?" This makes "Glatze" a noun meaning "bald head", right? What I am wondering is, is there an actual adjective that means "bald"? For example if I wanted to say "the dog is bald" or "the bald man over there", how would I say them?
2013年10月10日 12:56
解答 · 6
3
Yes, Glatze = bald head For an actual adjective, why not use a dictionary? E.g. http://de.pons.eu/dict/search/results/?q=bald&l=deen&in=&lf=
2013年10月10日
1
There is an adjective "kahl". It is used to describe a place where hairs or leaves etc. are missing, for example a tree or a branch without leaves (ein kahler Baum, ein kahler Ast). I think in German they don't say "ein kahler Mann", but "ein Mann mit einem kahlen Kop" (/ein Mann mit einem Kahlkopf) (a man with no hairs on the head). Similarly you can say a bald dog (ein kahler Hund). By the way, you can also say "a bald man" as "ein Mann mit der Glatze".
2013年10月10日
Yes, you are perfectly correct. The bald man over there = Der man mit der glatze, dort drueben... I've never seen a bald dog!
2013年10月13日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!