nåt

See also: Appendix:Variations of "nat"

Swedish

Etymology 1

From Low German not, nut, from Proto-Germanic *hnōjaną (to smooth, join together), from Proto-Indo-European *kneh₂-. Cognate with Danish not, Norwegian Bokmål not, Norwegian Nynorsk not, nót and German Nut.[1][2]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnoːt/

Noun

nåt c

  1. a groove, a fold
Declension
Declension of nåt
nominative genitive
singular indefinite nåt nåts
definite nåten nåtens
plural indefinite nåtar nåtars
definite nåtarna nåtarnas
Alternative forms

Etymology 2

From Low German nat, naad, from Middle Low German nāt, from Old Saxon nād, from Proto-Germanic *nēdiz (that which is sewn; seam; stitch), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)neh₁- (to spin (thread), to sew).

Cognate with Danish nåd, Norwegian Bokmål nat, Norwegian Nynorsk nat, German Naht and Dutch naad.[3][4]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnɔt/
  • Homophone: nått

Noun

nåt c or n

  1. a seam, a joint (between boards)
Declension

Etymology 3

Pronoun

nåt c (genitive nåts, neuter nåt, plural några)

  1. (colloquial) syncopic form of något (something, anything)
    Ingen kan göra allt, men alla kan göra nåt
    No one can do everything, but everyone can do something
    Finns det nåt jag kan hjälpa dig med?
    Is there anything I can help you with?
    1. any (at all, to any extent)
      Har du sovit nåt?
      Have you slept any?
Usage notes

See the usage notes at något.

See also
  • nån c (someone, anyone)
  • nåra pl (some)

Determiner

nåt

  1. neuter singular of nån

References

Anagrams