Contionary:mørk
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Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk muerk, from Old Skundavisk muerka, from Old Norse myrkr, from Proto-Germanic *merkuz. The inherited ᛗᛖᚱᚲᚢᛉ (merkuŕ) existed in early Halmisk, but quickly became obsolete before coming back through Old Norse some centuries later. Some linguists claim that mørk wasn't actually inherited from Middle Skundavisk but rather borrowed again from Early Modern Danish mørk because of the irregular vowel shift /y/ > /ø/. However, most linguists think that the Danish form influenced the irregular shift without replacing the word itself.
Pronunciation
- IPA: /mɶɐk/
Adjective
mørk (comparative mørker, superlative mørkest)
- dark
- Wi lepen in ðe mørken stråter ðes stæd.
- We walked in the dark streets of the city.
- Wi lepen in ðe mørken stråter ðes stæd.
Inflection
| number and gender | singular | plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | feminine | neuter | all genders | ||
| predicative | hi is mørk | si is mørk | hit is mørk | si sind mørk | |
| strong declension | common | mørk | mørke | mørk | mørke |
| genitive | mørkes | mørker | mørkes | mørker | |
| weak declension | common | mørke | mørke | mørke | mørken |
| genitive | mørken | mørken | mørken | mørken | |