regne
Catalan
Etymology
Noun
regne m (plural regnes)
- kingdom
- (taxonomy) kingdom
Related terms
Danish
Etymology 1
Verb
regne (imperative regn, infinitive at regne, present tense regner, past tense regnede, perfect tense har regnet)
Etymology 2
From late Old Norse reikna. Cognates include Swedish räkna, Norwegian Bokmål regne, Norwegian Nynorsk rekna and Icelandic reikna.[1]
Verb
regne (imperative regn, infinitive at regne, present tense regner, past tense regnede, perfect tense har regnet)
References
German
Verb
regne
- First-person singular present of regnen.
- First-person singular subjunctive I of regnen.
- Third-person singular subjunctive I of regnen.
- Imperative singular of regnen.
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French regne.
Noun
regne m (plural regnes)
Descendants
- French: règne
References
- regne on Dictionnaire du Moyen Français (1330-1500) (in French)
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology 1
Verb
regne (imperative regn, present tense regner, simple past regna or regnet or regnte, past participle regna or regnet or regnt, present participle regnende)
- to rain (of rain: to fall from the sky)
Derived terms
Related terms
Etymology 2
Verb
regne (imperative regn, present tense regner, passive regnes, simple past and past participle regna or regnet, present participle regnende)
Derived terms
References
- “regne” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Verb
regne (present tense regnar or regner, past tense regna or regnde, past participle regna or regnt, present participle regnande, imperative regn)
- Alternative form of regna
Old French
Alternative forms
Etymology
Noun
regne m (oblique plural regnes, nominative singular regnes, nominative plural regne)