-berg
English
editEtymology 1
editSuffix
edit-berg
- Added to a stem to form a patronymic or matronymic surname.
Usage notes
editAlong with -stein and -witz, -berg is a stereotypically Ashkenazi suffix. For example:
- 2007 May 24, Mark I. Pinsky, The Gospel according to The Simpsons, Bigger and Possibly Even Better! Edition[1], Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, →ISBN, page 227:
- In one 2007 episode of the determinedly anti-Christian show, a Jewish surgeon, Dr. Chosenberg, is accidentally injured when Moral Orel’s ceramic bobblehead Jesus hits him in the chest.
Derived terms
editCategory English terms suffixed with -berg not found
Etymology 2
editBack-formation from iceberg
Suffix
edit-berg
- (usually humorous) Forms nouns defining large agglomerations of a particular substance or quality.
- 2013, Jonathan Meades, Pompey, →ISBN:
- He saw a spur-winged plover grubbing on a little mudberg and his eyes told him the mudberg moved when the bird screeched, flew, became a mote.
German
editEtymology
editFrom Berg (“mountain”).
Pronunciation
editAudio: (file)
Suffix
edit-berg m
- Added to a stem to form a patronymic or matronymic surname.