A1 noun #2,560 am häufigsten 3 Min. Lesezeit

envelope

An envelope is a flat paper cover used to hold a letter or card for mailing.

Explanation at your level:

An envelope is a paper bag for letters. You put your letter in the envelope. Then you close the flap. You write the address on the front. Now you can mail it!

You use an envelope to send a card or a letter. It is usually white. You put the paper inside and seal it. You need a stamp on the envelope to send it in the mail.

An envelope is a flat paper container used to protect documents. In business, you often use a 'window envelope' so the address shows through. Remember to 'seal' the envelope before you drop it in the mailbox.

Beyond its literal meaning, the term envelope is used in the idiom 'push the envelope,' meaning to innovate or exceed current standards. In technical fields, it can refer to the operational limits of an aircraft or machine.

The term envelope functions as both a physical object and a metaphorical boundary. In mathematics and engineering, an 'envelope' describes a curve that is tangent to a family of curves. It represents the outer limit or the 'boundary' of a system's performance.

Etymologically, the envelope represents the concept of 'envelopment' or 'encapsulation.' In literary contexts, it may symbolize secrecy or containment. Whether discussing the 'envelope of the atmosphere' or the 'envelope of a function,' the word consistently denotes an encompassing layer that defines the scope of the object within.

Wort in 30 Sekunden

  • An envelope is a paper container for mail.
  • It has a flap you seal.
  • The verb form is 'envelop'.
  • It is also used metaphorically as 'push the envelope'.

Think of an envelope as a protective suit for your mail! It is a simple yet essential tool we use to keep our letters, birthday cards, and important documents safe and private while they travel through the postal system.

Most envelopes are made of paper and come in a standard rectangular shape. You insert your paper, fold the flap down, and use a bit of glue or a sticker to keep it shut. It is a fundamental object in daily life, even in our digital world.

The word envelope comes from the French verb envelopper, which means 'to wrap up' or 'to cover.' It entered the English language in the 17th century, originally referring to a wrapper or a covering of any kind.

Before the 1840s, envelopes were actually quite rare and expensive because they were handmade. Most people just folded their letters and sealed them with wax. When the Uniform Penny Post was introduced in Britain in 1840, sending mail became cheap and popular, leading to the mass production of the paper envelopes we know today.

You will use the word envelope whenever you are talking about sending mail or organizing documents. Common collocations include 'seal an envelope,' 'address an envelope,' and 'a stamped envelope.'

In a formal office setting, you might refer to a 'manila envelope' for large documents. In casual conversation, you might simply say, 'I need to find an envelope for this card.' It is a very neutral term used by everyone from toddlers to CEOs.

1. Push the envelope: To approach or extend the limits of what is possible. Example: The new design really pushes the envelope of modern architecture.

2. Envelope of air: A layer of air surrounding an object or planet. Example: The Earth is protected by an envelope of air.

3. Brown envelope: Often refers to an illicit bribe or secret payment. Example: The scandal was uncovered when they found the brown envelope.

4. Seal the envelope: To finalize an agreement. Example: Let's shake hands and seal the envelope on this deal.

5. Return envelope: A pre-addressed envelope included for a reply. Example: Please use the enclosed return envelope to send back the form.

The noun envelope is countable, so you can have 'one envelope' or 'many envelopes.' The stress usually falls on the first syllable: EN-vuh-lope.

Interestingly, some people pronounce it with a French-style 'on' sound (ON-vuh-lope), which is common in both British and American English. It rhymes with 'develop' (in some dialects) or 'cantaloupe.' Always use the indefinite article 'an' before it, as it starts with a vowel sound.

Fun Fact

Before envelopes, letters were folded and sealed with wax.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ˈɛnvələʊp/

Starts with a clear 'en' sound.

US /ˈɛnvəloʊp/

Often sounds like 'on-vuh-lope'.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing the 'v' as 'f'
  • Swallowing the 'lope' sound
  • Forgetting the stress on the first syllable

Rhymes With

cantaloupe develop antelope envelope (verb form) envelop

Difficulty Rating

Lesen 1/5

Very common word.

Writing 1/5

Simple spelling.

Speaking 1/5

Easy to pronounce.

Hören 1/5

Clear sounds.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

paper letter mail stamp

Learn Next

envelop postage correspondence

Fortgeschritten

encapsulate boundary tangent

Grammar to Know

Articles with nouns

an envelope

Countable nouns

one envelope, two envelopes

Verb vs Noun stress

EN-velope vs en-VEL-op

Examples by Level

1

I put the letter in the envelope.

put = place, letter = paper message

Use 'in' for containers.

2

Do you have an envelope?

have = possess

Use 'an' before vowel sounds.

3

The envelope is white.

white = color

Adjective placement.

4

I need a pen and an envelope.

need = require

Conjunction 'and'.

5

Seal the envelope, please.

seal = close

Imperative verb.

6

Where is my envelope?

where = location

Question word.

7

This is a big envelope.

big = large

Adjective size.

8

Open the envelope.

open = reveal

Direct command.

1

Please address the envelope clearly.

2

I bought a pack of envelopes.

3

The envelope was empty.

4

Can you lick the envelope flap?

5

I lost the envelope with the money.

6

Put the stamp on the top right of the envelope.

7

The envelope arrived in the mail today.

8

She tore open the envelope excitedly.

1

The documents were sent in a large manila envelope.

2

Don't forget to seal the envelope before mailing it.

3

He slipped a note into the envelope.

4

Please include a self-addressed stamped envelope.

5

The envelope contained a confidential report.

6

I couldn't find an envelope that fit the card.

7

The company sent the invoice in a window envelope.

8

She checked the envelope for a return address.

1

The engineers are trying to push the performance envelope of the new engine.

2

The envelope of the storm is moving toward the coast.

3

He handed her a plain white envelope across the table.

4

The project is really pushing the envelope of current technology.

5

The data falls well within the expected envelope.

6

She carefully slit the envelope open with a letter opener.

7

The envelope of the atmosphere protects us from radiation.

8

There was a thick envelope waiting for him on the desk.

1

The mathematical envelope of the family of curves is a parabola.

2

The pilot had to stay within the flight envelope to maintain control.

3

The political scandal involved a brown envelope exchange.

4

His artistic style really pushes the envelope of traditional painting.

5

The envelope of the virus protects its genetic material.

6

The budget envelope was strictly limited this year.

7

She felt as though she were trapped within an envelope of silence.

8

The envelope of the sound wave changed as it hit the wall.

1

The envelope of the function defines the maximum possible values.

2

The historical envelope of the Renaissance period is debated by scholars.

3

He operated at the very edge of the envelope of human endurance.

4

The envelope of the star's radiation is visible through the telescope.

5

The social envelope in which they lived was very restrictive.

6

The envelope of the building's design creates a unique microclimate.

7

The envelope of the poem's structure mirrors its theme.

8

He pushed the envelope of his own morality during the crisis.

Gegenteile

contents insert

Häufige Kollokationen

seal an envelope
address an envelope
manila envelope
stamped envelope
tear open an envelope
window envelope
thick envelope
return envelope
push the envelope
open an envelope

Idioms & Expressions

"push the envelope"

to exceed limits

They are pushing the envelope with this new car.

neutral

"a brown envelope"

a bribe

He was caught taking a brown envelope.

informal

"seal the envelope"

to finalize

Let's seal the envelope on this deal.

casual

"envelope of air"

atmosphere

We live in an envelope of air.

scientific

"return envelope"

reply container

Don't forget the return envelope.

neutral

"the envelope is pushed"

limits are tested

The envelope is pushed every day.

neutral

Easily Confused

envelope vs envelop

similar spelling

verb vs noun

The fog will envelop (verb) the city; put it in an envelope (noun).

envelope vs package

both are containers

package is for items, envelope for paper

I sent a package (box) and an envelope (letter).

envelope vs wrapper

both cover things

wrapper is for food/items, envelope for mail

Candy wrapper vs letter envelope.

envelope vs folder

both hold paper

folder is for storage, envelope for mailing

File folder vs mailing envelope.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + put + object + in + envelope

I put the letter in the envelope.

A2

Verb + the + envelope

Seal the envelope.

A2

Adjective + envelope

It is a large envelope.

B2

Push + the + envelope

We need to push the envelope.

B1

The + envelope + contains + object

The envelope contains a check.

Wortfamilie

Nouns

envelopment the act of covering

Verbs

envelop to wrap or cover completely

Adjectives

enveloped covered or wrapped

Verwandt

envelope the noun form

How to Use It

frequency

8

Formality Scale

formal neutral casual

Häufige Fehler

Using 'envelope' as a verb envelop
Envelope is the noun; envelop is the verb.
Forgetting the 'n' in spelling envelope
People often write 'envelop' for the noun.
Mispronouncing the first syllable EN-vuh-lope
It is not 'AN-vuh-lope' in standard US English.
Using 'a' instead of 'an' an envelope
Starts with a vowel sound.
Confusing it with 'envelop' The fog enveloped the city.
Envelop (no 'e' at end) means to surround.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace Trick

Imagine a giant envelope walking into your front door.

💡

When Native Speakers Use It

When talking about mail or limits.

🌍

Cultural Insight

The Oscars use envelopes to announce winners.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Noun = envelope, Verb = envelop.

💡

Say It Right

Stress the first syllable.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't write 'envelop' for the object.

💡

Did You Know?

Envelopes were once handmade.

💡

Study Smart

Practice using the idiom 'push the envelope' in a sentence.

💡

Writing Tip

Always capitalize the address on an envelope.

💡

Word Family

Link envelope to envelop.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

En-velope: ENter the VElope (a made-up word for a paper cave).

Visual Association

A white rectangle with a stamp.

Word Web

mail stamp letter paper address

Herausforderung

Address an envelope to yourself today.

Wortherkunft

French

Original meaning: to wrap up

Kultureller Kontext

None, but 'brown envelope' implies corruption.

Commonly used in offices and for personal mail.

The 'brown envelope' trope in crime dramas. The 'envelope' in the Oscars (the winner announcement).

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

at the post office

  • Do you have envelopes?
  • How much for this envelope?

at work

  • Please seal the envelope.
  • Where are the manila envelopes?

at home

  • I need an envelope for this card.

in business

  • The contract is in the envelope.

Conversation Starters

"Do you still send letters in envelopes?"

"What is the most important thing you've ever received in an envelope?"

"Have you ever heard the idiom 'push the envelope'?"

"Do you prefer digital mail or physical envelopes?"

"What kind of envelopes do you keep at home?"

Journal Prompts

Write about the last time you received a letter in an envelope.

Describe the process of preparing a letter for the mail.

What does 'pushing the envelope' mean to you in your career?

Why do you think physical mail is still important?

Häufig gestellte Fragen

8 Fragen

Envelope is the noun; envelop is the verb.

EN-vuh-lope.

No, use 'envelop'.

An envelope with a clear plastic window.

From the French word for 'to wrap'.

Yes, from small cards to large manila ones.

Yes, for mailing letters.

To exceed limits.

Teste dich selbst

fill blank A1

Put the letter in the ___.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: envelope

An envelope holds a letter.

multiple choice A2

What do you do to an envelope before mailing it?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Seal it

You must seal it so the letter doesn't fall out.

true false B1

An envelope is a verb.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Falsch

Envelope is a noun. Envelop is the verb.

match pairs B1

Word

Bedeutung

All matched!

These are common actions with envelopes.

sentence order B2

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

Subject + verb + object.

fill blank C1

The pilot pushed the ___ of the aircraft.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: envelope

Idiomatic usage.

multiple choice B2

What is a 'brown envelope' often associated with?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Bribes

Cultural idiom for corruption.

true false A2

You should put a stamp on the envelope.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Richtig

Stamps are required for mail.

match pairs C2

Word

Bedeutung

All matched!

Technical definitions.

sentence order B1

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

Standard sentence structure.

Ergebnis: /10

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C1

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B2

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B1

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addressee

B2

The person or organization to whom a letter, package, or message is addressed. It refers to the intended recipient of a piece of communication.

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C1

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