A1 noun #636 am häufigsten 4 Min. Lesezeit

dust

Dust is the fine, dry powder that settles on surfaces like shelves and floors when you haven't cleaned for a while.

Explanation at your level:

Dust is the little grey pieces of dirt you see in your house. It is on tables, floors, and shelves. When a room is not clean, you see dust. You can use a cloth to clean it. It is very common!

Dust is a fine powder that you find on furniture. It is made of tiny bits of skin and dirt. If you do not clean your house for a week, you will see dust. You can say 'The table is dusty' to describe it.

Dust refers to the particles that settle on surfaces in your home. It is often a mixture of skin cells, fabric, and soil. We use the word dust as an uncountable noun, so we say 'there is a lot of dust' rather than 'there are many dusts.' It is a common household chore to remove it.

Beyond the household context, dust can refer to fine dry particles in the atmosphere. It is often used in collocations like 'thick dust' or 'a layer of dust.' In figurative language, we use it to talk about things that are old or forgotten, such as 'letting something gather dust.' It is a versatile word in both formal and informal registers.

The term dust carries significant weight in both scientific and literary contexts. Scientifically, it relates to particulate matter that impacts air quality. Figuratively, it evokes themes of mortality and the passage of time, as seen in the classic 'ashes to ashes, dust to dust.' Mastery involves understanding these nuances and using it in idiomatic expressions like 'biting the dust' or 'shaking the dust off' to add color to your speech.

At a mastery level, dust is understood as a primordial element. Its etymological roots connect it to the concept of 'storm' or 'vapor,' highlighting its ethereal nature. In literature, it is frequently employed to symbolize the inevitable decay of human endeavors. Whether discussing the 'cosmic dust' of astrophysics or the 'dust of history' in a philosophical essay, the word serves as a powerful metaphor for the finite nature of existence. Understanding its collocations, such as 'dust-laden' or 'dust-choked,' allows for precise and evocative writing.

Wort in 30 Sekunden

  • Dust is a fine powder of organic and inorganic particles.
  • It is an uncountable noun.
  • It is commonly associated with cleaning and neglect.
  • It has several metaphorical idiomatic uses.

Hey there! Have you ever noticed that grey, fuzzy layer on your bookshelf after a few weeks? That is dust. It is one of those things that is everywhere, whether we like it or not.

Essentially, dust is made up of tiny, microscopic bits of stuff. This can include dead skin cells, tiny fibers from your clothes, hair, bits of paper, and even little particles of soil from outside. It is basically the leftovers of our daily lives!

Because these particles are so light, they float through the air until they finally land on a surface. That is why you find it on top of furniture, behind the TV, or under the bed. It is a completely natural part of our environment, even if it is a bit annoying to clean up.

The word dust has a very long history. It comes from the Old English word dūst, which has roots in the Germanic languages. If you look at related languages, you will see the Old High German word tunst, which meant 'storm' or 'vapor'.

Isn't that interesting? It implies that back in the day, people thought of dust as something that moved like a storm or a cloud. It has been used to describe fine particles of earth for over a thousand years.

Historically, the word has also been used in a more poetic or dramatic sense. Think about the phrase 'ashes to ashes, dust to dust.' It represents the idea that everything eventually breaks down into its smallest, most basic form. It is a word that reminds us of the cycle of life and the impermanence of things.

In daily conversation, we usually talk about dust in the context of cleaning. You might say, 'I need to dust the living room,' which uses the word as a verb, but as a noun, we say, 'There is so much dust on this table.'

Common collocations include 'thick dust,' 'fine dust,' and 'household dust.' If you are talking about a very dirty place, you might say it is 'covered in dust.' In more formal or scientific contexts, you might hear about 'atmospheric dust' or 'particulate matter,' which is just a fancy way of saying dust in the air.

The word is very versatile. You can use it in a literal way, like cleaning your house, or in a metaphorical way, like 'biting the dust,' which means failing or ending. It is a neutral word that fits into almost any register, from casual chatting with friends to writing a formal report about air quality.

English is full of fun idioms involving dust! Here are a few you should know:

  • Bite the dust: To fail or break down. Example: 'My old car finally bit the dust yesterday.'
  • Gather dust: To be left unused for a long time. Example: 'That guitar has been gathering dust in the closet for years.'
  • Shake the dust off: To get back into an activity after a long break. Example: 'It is time to shake the dust off my running shoes.'
  • Leave someone in the dust: To be much faster or better than someone else. Example: 'She left the competition in the dust during the race.'
  • Dust off: To prepare something for use again. Example: 'I need to dust off my French skills before my trip to Paris.'

Grammatically, dust is an uncountable noun. This means you do not say 'a dust' or 'two dusts.' Instead, you use quantifiers like 'a lot of dust,' 'some dust,' or 'a layer of dust.'

Pronunciation is straightforward. In the UK and US, it is pronounced /dʌst/. It rhymes with words like must, trust, rust, and bust. The stress is always on the single syllable.

If you want to make it an adjective, you add a 'y' to get dusty. For example, 'The attic is very dusty.' Remember, because it is uncountable, you treat it as a singular subject in a sentence: 'The dust is everywhere,' not 'The dust are everywhere.'

Fun Fact

It shares a root with the German word for storm.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /dʌst/

Short 'u' sound like in 'bus'.

US /dʌst/

Short 'u' sound like in 'bus'.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing it like 'doost'
  • Pronouncing it like 'dost'
  • Adding an extra syllable

Rhymes With

must trust rust bust just

Difficulty Rating

Lesen 1/5

Very easy to read

Writing 2/5

Simple to use

Speaking 1/5

Easy to pronounce

Hören 1/5

Easy to hear

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

clean dirt house

Learn Next

particulate residue accumulation

Fortgeschritten

primordial impermanence

Grammar to Know

Uncountable Nouns

Dust is uncountable.

Phrasal Verbs

Dust off.

Adjective formation

Dusty.

Examples by Level

1

There is dust on the table.

dust = fine dirt

uncountable noun

2

I clean the dust.

clean = remove

verb usage

3

The room has dust.

has = contains

simple present

4

Dust is grey.

grey = color

adjective

5

Do not touch the dust.

touch = feel

imperative

6

I see the dust.

see = look at

subject-verb

7

The dust is everywhere.

everywhere = all places

adverb of place

8

Clean the dust now.

now = at this time

imperative

1

The furniture is covered in dust.

2

I need a cloth to wipe the dust.

3

My allergies are bad because of the dust.

4

He wiped the dust off his books.

5

The old attic was full of dust.

6

She hates seeing dust in her room.

7

The sunlight showed the dust in the air.

8

Please remove the dust from the shelf.

1

The books had been gathering dust for years.

2

There was a thick layer of dust on the floor.

3

The construction work created a lot of dust.

4

He dusted off his old camera to take photos.

5

The desert wind blew clouds of dust.

6

She cleaned the dust from the window sill.

7

The house was dusty after being empty for a month.

8

You should wear a mask to avoid breathing in dust.

1

The project was left to gather dust in the archives.

2

He was left in the dust by his faster rivals.

3

The old records were covered in the dust of time.

4

The storm kicked up a massive cloud of dust.

5

She felt like she was just biting the dust in that job.

6

It is time to shake the dust off and start again.

7

The museum curator cleaned the dust from the artifacts.

8

Fine dust particles can be harmful to your lungs.

1

The ancient ruins were choked with dust and debris.

2

His reputation was left in the dust after the scandal.

3

The theory was finally dusted off for further research.

4

We are all but dust in the grand scheme of the universe.

5

The atmosphere was thick with the dust of centuries.

6

He had to dust off his diplomatic skills for the meeting.

7

The city was veiled in a fine, golden dust.

8

The proposal was shelved and allowed to gather dust.

1

The poem contemplates the return of all things to dust.

2

Cosmic dust is the building block of new stars.

3

The historian sought to brush the dust off forgotten archives.

4

He was a man who had seen his dreams turn to dust.

5

The desert landscape was a vast, shimmering expanse of dust.

6

The library was a silent tomb of dust and parchment.

7

She felt the dust of the road clinging to her clothes.

8

The empire eventually crumbled into mere dust.

Synonyme

Gegenteile

cleanliness purity

Häufige Kollokationen

thick dust
fine dust
gather dust
wipe away dust
cloud of dust
dust particles
dust off
household dust
settle as dust
biting the dust

Idioms & Expressions

"bite the dust"

to fail or die

My phone bit the dust after I dropped it.

casual

"gather dust"

to be unused for a long time

My old bike is gathering dust in the garage.

neutral

"leave someone in the dust"

to be much better or faster

He left the others in the dust.

casual

"shake the dust off one's feet"

to leave a place and never return

He shook the dust off his feet and left the town.

literary

"dust off"

to prepare something for use again

I need to dust off my old textbooks.

neutral

"return to dust"

to die or decay

All things eventually return to dust.

literary

Easily Confused

dust vs dirt

Both mean unclean.

Dirt is usually heavier/mud; dust is fine powder.

Shoes get dirty with mud, shelves get dusty.

dust vs ash

Both are fine powders.

Ash comes from fire.

The fireplace is full of ash.

dust vs powder

Both are fine.

Powder is often intentional (like makeup).

She put powder on her face.

dust vs debris

Both are waste.

Debris is larger fragments.

The street was covered in debris after the storm.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + verb + dust

I see dust.

A2

Subject + wipe + dust + off

She wiped the dust off.

B1

Subject + gather + dust

The books gather dust.

B1

Subject + be + covered in + dust

The table is covered in dust.

B2

Subject + bite + the + dust

The car bit the dust.

Wortfamilie

Nouns

duster a tool for cleaning dust

Verbs

dust to remove dust

Adjectives

dusty covered with dust

Verwandt

dusty adjective form

How to Use It

frequency

8/10

Formality Scale

formal (particulate matter) neutral (dust) casual (dusty) slang (bite the dust)

Häufige Fehler

Using 'dusts' as a plural dust
Dust is an uncountable noun.
Saying 'a dust' some dust
Do not use 'a' with uncountable nouns.
Confusing 'dust' with 'dirty' dusty
Dust is the noun; dusty is the adjective.
Using 'dust' to mean 'dirt' in all cases dirt/soil
Dust is specifically fine powder, not just general mud.
Misspelling as 'dost' dust
The vowel sound is /ʌ/.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a giant vacuum cleaner in your living room.

💡

Native Speakers

They often use it to talk about cleaning.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Used in funeral rites.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always treat as singular.

💡

Say It Right

Keep the 'u' short.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Never add 's'.

💡

Did You Know?

Much of household dust is dead skin.

💡

Study Smart

Use it in a sentence about chores.

💡

Rhyme Time

Rhyme with 'must'.

💡

Article Rule

Use 'the' or 'some'.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

D-U-S-T: Dirty Under Surfaces Today.

Visual Association

A sunbeam showing dancing dust particles.

Word Web

cleaning dirt particles housework

Herausforderung

Find one dusty surface in your home and clean it today!

Wortherkunft

Old English

Original meaning: Fine particles of earth

Kultureller Kontext

None

Commonly associated with housework and the phrase 'ashes to ashes, dust to dust'.

'Dust in the Wind' by Kansas 'Bite the Dust' by Queen

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Cleaning

  • wipe the dust
  • dust the shelves
  • clean the dust

Construction

  • dust clouds
  • inhalation of dust
  • dust protection

Metaphorical

  • gather dust
  • bite the dust
  • dust off

Scientific

  • particulate matter
  • atmospheric dust
  • cosmic dust

Conversation Starters

"How often do you dust your room?"

"Do you have allergies to dust?"

"What is the dustiest place you have ever been?"

"Do you think it is important to keep a house dust-free?"

"Have you ever had to 'dust off' an old skill?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a room in your house that is very dusty.

Write about a time you had to clean a very dirty space.

What does the phrase 'dust to dust' mean to you?

If you could get rid of all the dust in the world, would you?

Häufig gestellte Fragen

8 Fragen

No, it is uncountable.

Use 'dusty'.

To dust (to clean).

No.

It is neutral, just a natural accumulation.

A tool to collect dust.

Yes.

Similar, but dust is finer.

Teste dich selbst

fill blank A1

There is ___ on the table.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: dust

Dust is uncountable.

multiple choice A2

Which word describes a table with dust on it?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: dusty

Dusty means covered in dust.

true false B1

You can say 'I have two dusts on my desk.'

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Falsch

Dust is uncountable.

match pairs B1

Word

Bedeutung

All matched!

These are common idioms.

sentence order B2

Tippe auf die Wörter unten, um den Satz zu bilden
Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort:

Subject + verb + object + preposition.

Ergebnis: /5

Related Content

Mehr Home Wörter

lamp

A1

Eine Lampe ist ein Gegenstand, der Licht macht, damit du auch im Dunkeln sehen kannst.

couch

A1

Ein langes Polstermöbel, auf dem mehrere Personen sitzen können. Es ist bequem und steht meist im Wohnzimmer.

villa

B1

Eine Villa ist ein großes, luxuriöses Haus, oft in ländlicher Gegend oder am Meer, meist für Ferien.

turf

B1

Turf ist eine Grasnarbe, also Gras mit Wurzeln, die man oft für Rollrasen nutzt. Es kann aber auch bedeuten, dass jemand sein eigenes Revier verteidigt.

stair

A1

A single step in a set of steps that lead from one level of a building to another. It is a flat surface that you put your foot on when moving up or down between floors.

houses

A1

Gebäude, in denen Menschen wohnen. Sie bieten Schutz und sind ein Ort für das Familienleben.

aquarium

B2

Relating to or used in a tank, bowl, or glass building where fish and other water creatures and plants are kept. It typically describes equipment, species, or activities specifically designed for these controlled aquatic environments.

antehospdom

C1

To provide preliminary care or hospitality within a domestic setting before a person is admitted to a formal institution or before a formal event occurs. This term describes the transitional phase of home-based management that precedes professional intervention.

notepad

A2

Ein Notizblock ist ein Block aus Papier, auf den man sich Dinge schreiben kann. Zum Beispiel für Erinnerungen oder kleine Skizzen.

billet

C1

To assign a temporary lodging place, such as a private home or public building, for someone to live in, especially soldiers, evacuees, or students. The term implies an official or compulsory arrangement rather than a voluntary choice of residence.

War das hilfreich?
Noch keine Kommentare. Sei der Erste, der seine Gedanken teilt!