smitte

Danish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈsmed̥ə], [ˈsmid̥ə]

Etymology 1

From Old Danish smittæ (stain), borrowed from Middle Low German smitte (stain), derived from the verb smitte, from Old Saxon smītan (to smite, originally "to smear, coat").

Noun

smitte

  1. infection

Etymology 2

From Middle Low German smitten (to stain), from Proto-Germanic *smittōną.

Verb

smitte (imperative smit, infinitive at smitte, present tense smitter, past tense smittede, perfect tense har smittet)

  1. to infect

Conjugation

Conjugation of smitte
active passive
present smitter smittes
past smittede smittedes
infinitive smitte smittes
imperative smit
participle
present smittende
past smittet
(auxiliary verb have)
gerund smitten

References

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology 1

From Middle Low German, probably from the verb smitten.

Noun

smitte m (definite singular smitten, uncountable)

  1. infection
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Middle Low German smitten.

Verb

smitte (imperative smitt, present tense smitter, passive smittes, simple past and past participle smitta or smittet, present participle smittende)

  1. to infect

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Middle Low German, probably from the verb smitten.

Noun

smitte m (definite singular smitten, uncountable)

  1. infection

Derived terms

References

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *smittā, *smittjā, from Proto-West Germanic *smittōn, *smittjōn (to smear), from Proto-Germanic *smittōną, *smitjōną, from Proto-Indo-European *smidnó-, *smidi-, from Proto-Indo-European *smeyd- (to smear, streak, whisk, rub).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsmit.te/

Noun

smitte f

  1. pollution, defilement

Declension

Weak feminine (n-stem):

Descendants

  • Middle English: smit, smytt