grimmen
Middle Dutch
Etymology
From Old Dutch *grimman, from Proto-Germanic *grimmaną.
Verb
grimmen
- to be angry, to rage
- to growl, to snarl
- to grin or smile (at something not humorous, or to hide displeasure)
Inflection
| Weak | ||
|---|---|---|
| Infinitive | grimmen | |
| 3rd sg. past | — | |
| 3rd pl. past | — | |
| Past participle | — | |
| Infinitive | grimmen | |
| In genitive | grimmens | |
| In dative | grimmene | |
| Indicative | Present | Past |
| 1st singular | grimme | — |
| 2nd singular | grims, grimmes | — |
| 3rd singular | grimt, grimmet | — |
| 1st plural | grimmen | — |
| 2nd plural | grimt, grimmet | — |
| 3rd plural | grimmen | — |
| Subjunctive | Present | Past |
| 1st singular | grimme | — |
| 2nd singular | grims, grimmes | — |
| 3rd singular | grimme | — |
| 1st plural | grimmen | — |
| 2nd plural | grimt, grimmet | — |
| 3rd plural | grimmen | — |
| Imperative | Present | |
| Singular | grim, grimme | |
| Plural | grimt, grimmet | |
| Present | Past | |
| Participle | grimmende | — |
Further reading
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.