modern German
Same basic meaning, but many neutral variations on the root.
If you speak English and German, you can follow Yiddish. If you have Yiddish well enough to speak it, you can pick up modern German in two shakes, but not English.
The Germanic group is not exactly the most logically structured language group.
I referred to "anschleppen" which is modern German, not Yiddish, partly because the pumping mechanism in the washer has a "Mitnehmer" and just couldn't resist the word play after Sam mentioned those two drains. (Mitnehmen, the root, means literally: to take with...)