kykna
Faroese
editPronunciation
editEtymology 1
edit(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “derived from the verb?”)
Noun
editkykna f (genitive singular kyknu, plural kyknur)
Declension
editDeclension of kykna | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
f1 | singular | plural | ||
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | kykna | kyknan | kyknur | kyknurnar |
accusative | kyknu | kyknuna | kyknur | kyknurnar |
dative | kyknu | kyknuni | kyknum | kyknunum |
genitive | kyknu | kyknunnar | kykna | kyknanna |
Derived terms
edit- kyknukjarni
- kyknusaft
- kyknuslim
- kyknuveggur
- kyknulag
- einkyknuplanta
- hárkykna
- húðkykna
- sansakykna
- tarmkykna
- blóðkykna
- nervakykna
- blóðkykna
- kynskykna
- eggkykna
- sáðkykna
- stammkykna
Etymology 2
editFrom Old Norse kykna, from older kvikna, from Proto-Germanic *kwiknaną, from *kwikwaz (“alive”). Doublet of kvikna.
Verb
editkykna (third person singular past indicative kyknaði, third person plural past indicative kyknaðu, supine kyknað)
- to come to life
- (of life) to begin, come into being
- nýtt lív kyknar
- new life comes into being (describing plants, animals, etc. coming to life)
- (of fire) to start to burn
- (of a situation, problem, war, epidemic, etc.) to arise, come up, break out
- to emerge, appear, come into view
Inflection
editConjugation of kykna (group v-30) | ||
---|---|---|
infinitive | kykna | |
supine | kyknað | |
participle (a6)1 | kyknandi | kyknaður |
present | past | |
first singular | kykni | kyknaði |
second singular | kyknar | kyknaði |
third singular | kyknar | kyknaði |
plural | kykna | kyknaðu |
imperative | ||
singular | kykna! | |
plural | kyknið! | |
1Only the past participle being declined. |
Categories:
- Faroese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Faroese/ɪʰkna
- Faroese lemmas
- Faroese nouns
- Faroese feminine nouns
- fo:Cytology
- Faroese terms inherited from Old Norse
- Faroese terms derived from Old Norse
- Faroese terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Faroese terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Faroese verbs
- Faroese terms with usage examples