German word starting with 'Knall' meaning a spontaneous, unscheduled abrupt meeting
I saw someone asking this question.
Is there a German word meaning 'a spontaneous, unscheduled, unexpected, abrupt meeting' starting with 'Knall~' ?
meaning single-word-request
add a comment |
I saw someone asking this question.
Is there a German word meaning 'a spontaneous, unscheduled, unexpected, abrupt meeting' starting with 'Knall~' ?
meaning single-word-request
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
add a comment |
I saw someone asking this question.
Is there a German word meaning 'a spontaneous, unscheduled, unexpected, abrupt meeting' starting with 'Knall~' ?
meaning single-word-request
I saw someone asking this question.
Is there a German word meaning 'a spontaneous, unscheduled, unexpected, abrupt meeting' starting with 'Knall~' ?
meaning single-word-request
meaning single-word-request
edited Nov 21 '18 at 8:09
Takkat♦
57k17121354
57k17121354
asked Nov 20 '18 at 9:30
Chan KimChan Kim
999315
999315
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
add a comment |
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
There is a word Knalleffekt used for a spontaneous, unexpected, sudden event (of any kind). But I am not aware of a word starting with Knall (which means bang) especially for a meeting.
You could of course create one, e.g. Knalltreffen, but then you are in the realm of poetry, not everyday or business communication. (And pay attention to what Takkat adds regarding Knalltreffen in his separate answer!)
The Duden Universalwörterbuch (some current edition) lists for Knall:
- Knallbonbon
- Knallcharge
- Knalleffekt
- Knallerbse
- Knallerei
- Knallfrosch
- Knallgas
- Knallkopf
- Knallkörper
- Knalltüte
as well as the adjectives
- knallblau
- knallgelb
- knallgrün
- knallrot
- knallbunt
- knalleng
- knallheiß
- knallig
- knallvoll
None of them means "sudden meeting".
However, you can think of various words starting with Blitz (lightning). The following terms are hardly to be found in contemporaneous dictionaries, but Blitz is more productive than Knall, meaning that you can create new words without being looked at with puzzlement. So Blitzkonferenz would pass almost unrecognized as a neologism, also Blitz-Meeting, Blitzbesprechung, Blitzgespräch, Blitztreffen. I could imagine finding these words used in some (informal) business communication, e.g. in e-mails to schedule a quick meeting.
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
add a comment |
This needs to be mentioned:
The only context I heard of Knalltreffen is from dingy contact queries on certain red light district announcements.
Examples (links for obvious reasons not included but with Google you will find them easily if the source is not banned on your machine):
- Suche einen aufgeschlossenen Charmeur für geile Knalltreffen.
- Suche für unregelmäßige Knalltreffen gesunde, schlanke Herren.
In these cases Knalltreffen is used for the original intention behind such contacts where knallen is used in its vulgar meaning for having sexual intercourse. If any of these meetings follow they may be spontaneous but not really unscheduled, or unexpected. I can not exclude that the meaning may be regionally different, but where I live it is definitely not a word people know.
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
add a comment |
I'm not aware of a substantive, associating sudden occurence with Knall. I also find this plausible, since Knall more often than not also indicates the termination of something (like a bursting balloon).
So Blitz- as in Blitzkrieg is the more likely choice (and its also used in English if I consider flash mob).
There is also the term ad hoc leaned from Latin (Duden gives the meaning aus dem Augenblick heraus, probably translated to instantaneous) if just the improvised nature shall be pointed out, so the usual scheduling activities with notification weeks before are bypassed.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "253"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgerman.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f48010%2fgerman-word-starting-with-knall-meaning-a-spontaneous-unscheduled-abrupt-meet%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There is a word Knalleffekt used for a spontaneous, unexpected, sudden event (of any kind). But I am not aware of a word starting with Knall (which means bang) especially for a meeting.
You could of course create one, e.g. Knalltreffen, but then you are in the realm of poetry, not everyday or business communication. (And pay attention to what Takkat adds regarding Knalltreffen in his separate answer!)
The Duden Universalwörterbuch (some current edition) lists for Knall:
- Knallbonbon
- Knallcharge
- Knalleffekt
- Knallerbse
- Knallerei
- Knallfrosch
- Knallgas
- Knallkopf
- Knallkörper
- Knalltüte
as well as the adjectives
- knallblau
- knallgelb
- knallgrün
- knallrot
- knallbunt
- knalleng
- knallheiß
- knallig
- knallvoll
None of them means "sudden meeting".
However, you can think of various words starting with Blitz (lightning). The following terms are hardly to be found in contemporaneous dictionaries, but Blitz is more productive than Knall, meaning that you can create new words without being looked at with puzzlement. So Blitzkonferenz would pass almost unrecognized as a neologism, also Blitz-Meeting, Blitzbesprechung, Blitzgespräch, Blitztreffen. I could imagine finding these words used in some (informal) business communication, e.g. in e-mails to schedule a quick meeting.
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
add a comment |
There is a word Knalleffekt used for a spontaneous, unexpected, sudden event (of any kind). But I am not aware of a word starting with Knall (which means bang) especially for a meeting.
You could of course create one, e.g. Knalltreffen, but then you are in the realm of poetry, not everyday or business communication. (And pay attention to what Takkat adds regarding Knalltreffen in his separate answer!)
The Duden Universalwörterbuch (some current edition) lists for Knall:
- Knallbonbon
- Knallcharge
- Knalleffekt
- Knallerbse
- Knallerei
- Knallfrosch
- Knallgas
- Knallkopf
- Knallkörper
- Knalltüte
as well as the adjectives
- knallblau
- knallgelb
- knallgrün
- knallrot
- knallbunt
- knalleng
- knallheiß
- knallig
- knallvoll
None of them means "sudden meeting".
However, you can think of various words starting with Blitz (lightning). The following terms are hardly to be found in contemporaneous dictionaries, but Blitz is more productive than Knall, meaning that you can create new words without being looked at with puzzlement. So Blitzkonferenz would pass almost unrecognized as a neologism, also Blitz-Meeting, Blitzbesprechung, Blitzgespräch, Blitztreffen. I could imagine finding these words used in some (informal) business communication, e.g. in e-mails to schedule a quick meeting.
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
add a comment |
There is a word Knalleffekt used for a spontaneous, unexpected, sudden event (of any kind). But I am not aware of a word starting with Knall (which means bang) especially for a meeting.
You could of course create one, e.g. Knalltreffen, but then you are in the realm of poetry, not everyday or business communication. (And pay attention to what Takkat adds regarding Knalltreffen in his separate answer!)
The Duden Universalwörterbuch (some current edition) lists for Knall:
- Knallbonbon
- Knallcharge
- Knalleffekt
- Knallerbse
- Knallerei
- Knallfrosch
- Knallgas
- Knallkopf
- Knallkörper
- Knalltüte
as well as the adjectives
- knallblau
- knallgelb
- knallgrün
- knallrot
- knallbunt
- knalleng
- knallheiß
- knallig
- knallvoll
None of them means "sudden meeting".
However, you can think of various words starting with Blitz (lightning). The following terms are hardly to be found in contemporaneous dictionaries, but Blitz is more productive than Knall, meaning that you can create new words without being looked at with puzzlement. So Blitzkonferenz would pass almost unrecognized as a neologism, also Blitz-Meeting, Blitzbesprechung, Blitzgespräch, Blitztreffen. I could imagine finding these words used in some (informal) business communication, e.g. in e-mails to schedule a quick meeting.
There is a word Knalleffekt used for a spontaneous, unexpected, sudden event (of any kind). But I am not aware of a word starting with Knall (which means bang) especially for a meeting.
You could of course create one, e.g. Knalltreffen, but then you are in the realm of poetry, not everyday or business communication. (And pay attention to what Takkat adds regarding Knalltreffen in his separate answer!)
The Duden Universalwörterbuch (some current edition) lists for Knall:
- Knallbonbon
- Knallcharge
- Knalleffekt
- Knallerbse
- Knallerei
- Knallfrosch
- Knallgas
- Knallkopf
- Knallkörper
- Knalltüte
as well as the adjectives
- knallblau
- knallgelb
- knallgrün
- knallrot
- knallbunt
- knalleng
- knallheiß
- knallig
- knallvoll
None of them means "sudden meeting".
However, you can think of various words starting with Blitz (lightning). The following terms are hardly to be found in contemporaneous dictionaries, but Blitz is more productive than Knall, meaning that you can create new words without being looked at with puzzlement. So Blitzkonferenz would pass almost unrecognized as a neologism, also Blitz-Meeting, Blitzbesprechung, Blitzgespräch, Blitztreffen. I could imagine finding these words used in some (informal) business communication, e.g. in e-mails to schedule a quick meeting.
edited Nov 21 '18 at 14:25
answered Nov 20 '18 at 11:13
Christian GeiselmannChristian Geiselmann
20k1355
20k1355
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
add a comment |
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
7
7
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
+1 for thinking of Blitz!
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 20 '18 at 12:57
2
2
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
What? No knallhart? That's the only know I knew!
– gerrit
Nov 20 '18 at 14:45
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@gerrit Yes, you are right. Interesting. Knallhart definitely should be in the listing.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:04
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
@Janka Good idea. More precisely, however, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen would be a meeting that takes place immediately after an important trigger event, and the peculiar thing is that it takes place immediately, not, say, after some time. So, a Knall-auf-Fall-Treffen is something more specific than a (supposed) Knalltreffen that takes place suddenly but without explicit relation to a trigger event.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 20 '18 at 19:07
add a comment |
This needs to be mentioned:
The only context I heard of Knalltreffen is from dingy contact queries on certain red light district announcements.
Examples (links for obvious reasons not included but with Google you will find them easily if the source is not banned on your machine):
- Suche einen aufgeschlossenen Charmeur für geile Knalltreffen.
- Suche für unregelmäßige Knalltreffen gesunde, schlanke Herren.
In these cases Knalltreffen is used for the original intention behind such contacts where knallen is used in its vulgar meaning for having sexual intercourse. If any of these meetings follow they may be spontaneous but not really unscheduled, or unexpected. I can not exclude that the meaning may be regionally different, but where I live it is definitely not a word people know.
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
add a comment |
This needs to be mentioned:
The only context I heard of Knalltreffen is from dingy contact queries on certain red light district announcements.
Examples (links for obvious reasons not included but with Google you will find them easily if the source is not banned on your machine):
- Suche einen aufgeschlossenen Charmeur für geile Knalltreffen.
- Suche für unregelmäßige Knalltreffen gesunde, schlanke Herren.
In these cases Knalltreffen is used for the original intention behind such contacts where knallen is used in its vulgar meaning for having sexual intercourse. If any of these meetings follow they may be spontaneous but not really unscheduled, or unexpected. I can not exclude that the meaning may be regionally different, but where I live it is definitely not a word people know.
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
add a comment |
This needs to be mentioned:
The only context I heard of Knalltreffen is from dingy contact queries on certain red light district announcements.
Examples (links for obvious reasons not included but with Google you will find them easily if the source is not banned on your machine):
- Suche einen aufgeschlossenen Charmeur für geile Knalltreffen.
- Suche für unregelmäßige Knalltreffen gesunde, schlanke Herren.
In these cases Knalltreffen is used for the original intention behind such contacts where knallen is used in its vulgar meaning for having sexual intercourse. If any of these meetings follow they may be spontaneous but not really unscheduled, or unexpected. I can not exclude that the meaning may be regionally different, but where I live it is definitely not a word people know.
This needs to be mentioned:
The only context I heard of Knalltreffen is from dingy contact queries on certain red light district announcements.
Examples (links for obvious reasons not included but with Google you will find them easily if the source is not banned on your machine):
- Suche einen aufgeschlossenen Charmeur für geile Knalltreffen.
- Suche für unregelmäßige Knalltreffen gesunde, schlanke Herren.
In these cases Knalltreffen is used for the original intention behind such contacts where knallen is used in its vulgar meaning for having sexual intercourse. If any of these meetings follow they may be spontaneous but not really unscheduled, or unexpected. I can not exclude that the meaning may be regionally different, but where I live it is definitely not a word people know.
edited Nov 21 '18 at 15:16
answered Nov 21 '18 at 14:16
Takkat♦Takkat
57k17121354
57k17121354
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
add a comment |
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
Interesting. I did not know that the word is indeed in use.
– Christian Geiselmann
Nov 21 '18 at 14:24
1
1
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
Interesting indeed. I would add, that the verb knallen in its meaning of to have sexual intercourse is rather obscene in german, just as its literal to bang in english.
– jonathan.scholbach
Nov 21 '18 at 14:44
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
@jonathan.scholbach - Good addition! It is all rather offensive language, so no wonder we know nothing about it ;)
– Takkat♦
Nov 21 '18 at 15:11
add a comment |
I'm not aware of a substantive, associating sudden occurence with Knall. I also find this plausible, since Knall more often than not also indicates the termination of something (like a bursting balloon).
So Blitz- as in Blitzkrieg is the more likely choice (and its also used in English if I consider flash mob).
There is also the term ad hoc leaned from Latin (Duden gives the meaning aus dem Augenblick heraus, probably translated to instantaneous) if just the improvised nature shall be pointed out, so the usual scheduling activities with notification weeks before are bypassed.
add a comment |
I'm not aware of a substantive, associating sudden occurence with Knall. I also find this plausible, since Knall more often than not also indicates the termination of something (like a bursting balloon).
So Blitz- as in Blitzkrieg is the more likely choice (and its also used in English if I consider flash mob).
There is also the term ad hoc leaned from Latin (Duden gives the meaning aus dem Augenblick heraus, probably translated to instantaneous) if just the improvised nature shall be pointed out, so the usual scheduling activities with notification weeks before are bypassed.
add a comment |
I'm not aware of a substantive, associating sudden occurence with Knall. I also find this plausible, since Knall more often than not also indicates the termination of something (like a bursting balloon).
So Blitz- as in Blitzkrieg is the more likely choice (and its also used in English if I consider flash mob).
There is also the term ad hoc leaned from Latin (Duden gives the meaning aus dem Augenblick heraus, probably translated to instantaneous) if just the improvised nature shall be pointed out, so the usual scheduling activities with notification weeks before are bypassed.
I'm not aware of a substantive, associating sudden occurence with Knall. I also find this plausible, since Knall more often than not also indicates the termination of something (like a bursting balloon).
So Blitz- as in Blitzkrieg is the more likely choice (and its also used in English if I consider flash mob).
There is also the term ad hoc leaned from Latin (Duden gives the meaning aus dem Augenblick heraus, probably translated to instantaneous) if just the improvised nature shall be pointed out, so the usual scheduling activities with notification weeks before are bypassed.
answered Nov 21 '18 at 13:44
guidotguidot
12.1k1544
12.1k1544
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to German Language Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.
Please pay close attention to the following guidance:
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgerman.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f48010%2fgerman-word-starting-with-knall-meaning-a-spontaneous-unscheduled-abrupt-meet%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Maybe you are thinking of "Zusammenknall" depending on what you mean with meeting. But even then Knall is at the end.
– Lichtbringer
Nov 20 '18 at 16:39