digna

See also: Digna and digná

Asturian

Adjective

digna

  1. feminine singular of dignu

Catalan

Pronunciation

Adjective

digna f sg

  1. feminine singular of digne

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from French digne, Italian degno, Spanish digno, all from Latin dīgnus, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dḱ-nós, from *deḱ- (to take).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈdiɡna/

Adjective

digna

  1. worthy; meriting, deserving; having merit, worth, virtue

Derived terms

  • digneso (worthiness)

Latin

Adjective

digna

  1. inflection of dignus:
    1. nominative/vocative feminine singular
    2. nominative/accusative/vocative neuter plural

Adjective

dignā

  1. ablative feminine singular of dignus

Old Norse

digna (að), verb

  1. to become moist; to lose temper (as in steel); to lose heart

Portuguese

Adjective

digna

  1. feminine singular of digno

Verb

digna

  1. inflection of dignar:
    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin dignare.

Verb

a digna (third-person singular present dignează, past participle dignat) 1st conj.

  1. to deign
  2. to consider worthy

Conjugation

Spanish

Adjective

digna

  1. feminine singular of digno

Verb

digna

  1. only used in se digna, third-person singular present indicative of dignarse
  2. only used in te ... digna, syntactic variant of dígnate, second-person singular imperative of dignarse

Swedish

Etymology

Related to deg (dough). Compare Old Norse deigr (soft).

Verb

digna (present dignar, preterite dignade, supine dignat, imperative digna)

  1. to slowly collapse (sink down, due to a heavy burden)
  2. (figuratively) to be plentiful or laden
    ett dignande julbord
    a plentiful/sumptuous Christmas smorgasbord
    Träden dignade av frukt
    The trees were laden/bursting with fruit
  3. (figuratively) to be overburdened, to be weighed down, to wilt
    De dignade under arbetsbördan
    They wilted under the workload

Conjugation

See also

References

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