Contionary:regen: Difference between revisions
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{{nm-header|ˈrʲegʲɪn}} | |||
{{nm-pgmc|hraigrô}}Altered to ''[[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/hraigô#Proto-Germanic|*hraigô]]'' by dissimulation. | |||
{{nm-noun-mh-2-S|régen|rígen|régen|régin|rígin|heron}} | |||
===Hypernyms=== | |||
* ''{{term|fugil#Niemish|fúgil}}'' ("bird") | |||
[[Category:Contionary]] | |||
==Skundavisk== | ==Skundavisk== | ||
===Etymology=== | ===Etymology=== |
Latest revision as of 08:03, 7 December 2022
Niemish
Pronunciation
- IPA: /ˈrʲegʲɪn/
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *hraigrô. Altered to *hraigô by dissimulation.
Noun
² régen n.m. syncopating hard stem
- heron
Declension
declension of régen (mh-S declension) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | |||
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | régen | réginan | régens | réginas |
genitive | rígens | rígines | rígine | rígense |
dative | régen | réginum | réginą | réginę |
Hypernyms
- fúgil ("bird")
Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk regen, from Old Skundavisk regn, from Halmisk ᚱᛖᚷᚾ (regn), ᚱᛖᚷᚾᛖ (regne), from Proto-Germanic *regną. The masculine form regna (from Proto-West Germanic *regnaz) is also widely attested in Halmisk and Early Old Skundavisk, and some argue that the neuter form suceeded under Norse influence. This would explain why the Skundavisk word for rain is neuter, like in the North Germanic languages, while it's masculine in every other West Germanic languages.
Pronunciation
- IPA: /reɟɘn/
Noun
regen n. (class 3c, genitive regens, plural regene)
- rain
- Wi gingen after thet regen out.
- We went out after the rain.
- Wi gingen after thet regen out.