Home

Händlers

Händlers is a German language form related to the noun Händler, meaning merchant. In modern standard German the explicit genitive form is des Händlers, but Händlers appears in older texts and in the creation of compound nouns to express possession or association, such as in phrases like Händlersgilde (guild of merchants) or Händlersnetz (merchants’ network). In these compounds Händlers functions as a possessive element meaning “of merchants” or “merchants’.”

Etymology and historical usage: Händlers derives from Händler with the addition of a suffix used in historical

Modern usage: Outside of historical writing and fixed compound nouns, Händlers is rarely used as an independent

See also: Händler, Handel, Handelsgesellschaft, Handelsnetz, Handelsgilde.

German
to
form
genitives
or
attributive
links.
In
Early
New
High
German
and
earlier
periods,
possessive
forms
were
more
freely
written
with
an
-s
ending.
Although
the
contemporary
genitive
is
typically
formed
with
des
Händlers,
the
-s
form
persists
in
certain
historical
spellings
and
in
specific
compounds.
word
in
everyday
contemporary
German.
It
is
encountered
primarily
in
scholarly
or
genealogical
contexts
when
discussing
older
legal
or
commercial
texts,
or
as
part
of
surnames
and
place
names
that
preserve
older
occupational
origins.