An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language/Annotated/Matte

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Matte (1.), feminine (an Alemannian word unknown to Suabian and Bavarian), from the equivalent Middle High German mate, matte, feminine, ‘mead, meadow’; Old High German *matta, feminine, is wanting (but Old High German mato-scrëch, ‘grasshopper,’ is preserved). Gothic *maþwa, *mêdwa, is not recorded; compare English meadow, mead, from Anglo-Saxon mœ̂d (genitive mœ̂dwe), ‘meadow,’ Middle Low German mâde, Old Low German mâtha, mada, Old Frisian mêth. They seem to be based on a Teutonic root mâþ, med, which is connected with Latin mêto, ‘to mow, reap,’ and which has a shorter form, , in Modern High German mähen.

Matte (2.), feminine, ‘mat,’ from Middle High German matte (late Middle High German also matze), Old High German matta, feminine, ‘covering woven of straw, rushes, &c., mat’; Dutch mat, Anglo-Saxon meatte, feminine, English mat. The correspondence of the High German and Low German-English dental indicates that the word was borrowed, and as a fact it was introduced during the Old High German period. It is based on Latin matta, ‘mat made of rushes.’