niozan
Old High German
Alternative forms
- nioȥȥan, niaȥan
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *neutan, akin to Gothic 𐌽𐌹𐌿𐍄𐌰𐌽 (niutan, “to catch, to reach”), Old Norse njóta, Old English nēotan.
Conjugation
Conjugation of nioȥan (strong class 2)
| infinitive | nioȥan | |
|---|---|---|
| indicative | present | past |
| 1st person singular | niuȥu, niuȥo | nōȥ |
| 2nd person singular | niuȥis, niuȥist | nuȥȥi |
| 3rd person singular | niuȥit | nōȥ |
| 1st person plural | nioȥem, nioȥemēs | nuȥȥum, nuȥȥumēs |
| 2nd person plural | nioȥet | nuȥȥut |
| 3rd person plural | nioȥant | nuȥȥun |
| subjunctive | present | past |
| 1st person singular | nioȥe | nuȥȥi |
| 2nd person singular | nioȥēs, nioȥēst | nuȥȥīs, nuȥȥīst |
| 3rd person singular | nioȥe | nuȥȥi |
| 1st person plural | nioȥēm, nioȥemēs | nuȥȥīm, nuȥȥīmēs |
| 2nd person plural | nioȥēt | nuȥȥīt |
| 3rd person plural | nioȥēn | nuȥȥīn |
| imperative | present | |
| singular | niuȥ | |
| plural | nioȥet | |
| participle | present | past |
| nioȥanti | ginoȥȥan | |
References
- Joseph Wright, An Old High German Primer, 2nd ed., 1906, p. 166: "nioʐʐan, nioʐan, niaʐan, sv. II, use, enjoy, share in."
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