trå
Danish
Etymology
From Old Danish trodhe, trædhe, Old Norse troða, from Proto-Germanic *trudaną (“to tread”). See under træde.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈtˢʁɔˀ]
References
Norn
Etymology
From Old Norse þrá, from Proto-Germanic *þrawō.
Verb
trå
- to have a great desire for
- to long for
Norwegian Bokmål
Verb
trå (imperative trå, present tense trår, passive trås, simple past trådde or trådte or tro, past participle trådd or trådt, present participle trående)
- to tread, step, set foot (på / on)
- trå vannet - tread water
Derived terms
References
- “trå” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- Homophone: tråd
Noun
trå f (definite singular tråa, indefinite plural tråer, definite plural tråene)
Verb
trå (present tense trår, past tense trådde, past participle trått/trådd, passive infinitive tråast, present participle tråande, imperative trå)
Adjective
trå (masculine and feminine trå, neuter trått, definite singular and plural trå or tråe, comparative tråare, indefinite superlative tråast, definite superlative tråaste)
Verb
trå (present tense trår, past tense trådde, past participle trått/trådd, passive infinitive tråast, present participle tråande, imperative trå)
- to tread
References
- “trå” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Anagrams
Swedish
Etymology
From Old Norse þrá, from Proto-Germanic *þrawō (“longing, suffering”).
Derived terms
- åtrå (“(romantic) desire”)
Related terms
- trånad (“great longing”)