Glossary entry

German term or phrase:

sch machen

English translation:

to say/go shush

Added to glossary by Olav Rixen
Oct 22, 2004 16:17
19 yrs ago
German term

sch machen

German to English Art/Literary Music
From one of Mozart's letters home:

"Mithin machten die Zuhörer, wie ich's erwarte, beym piano sch - dann kamm gleich das forte - sie das forte hören, und die hände zu klatschen war eins."
Proposed translations (English)
4 +6 to say "shush"
2 hushed / fell silent / (shut up)

Proposed translations

+6
4 mins
Selected

to say "shush"

See: http://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definition/english... :-)

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Note added at 5 mins (2004-10-22 16:22:55 GMT)
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OR: \"to utter \'shush\'\" ;-)
Peer comment(s):

agree Renate FitzRoy : say, not utter
44 mins
No, not utter. Thanks Renate! :-)
agree Melanie Nassar : said "shh" or
1 hr
I've seen that as well. Thanks Armaat. :-)
agree Edith Kelly
1 hr
Thank you Edith.
agree Tamara Ferencak
2 hrs
Thank you Tamara.
agree Krisztina Vasarhelyi
4 hrs
Thank you Krisztina.
agree Robert M Maier : they *went* "shush" (to keep the colloquiality of "machen")
5 hrs
Yes, I forgot about "go", i.e. "to go shush" or "to go shh", and yes, putting it in quotes makes it clear that it is the sound that is being expressed. Thank you Robert. :-)
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thanks, Derek, and all who tried."
23 hrs

hushed / fell silent / (shut up)

Couldn't it also mean they themselves shut up?
e.g. "a hush fell over the listeners"

Something went wrong...
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