gróa

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Icelandic

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Etymology

From Old Norse gróa, from Proto-Germanic *grōaną, from Proto-Indo-European *gʰreH₁- (to grow, become green).

Pronunciation

Verb

gróa (ri-verb, third-person singular past indicative greri or gréri, supine gróið)

  1. to grow
  2. to heal
    Sárið grær ekki.
    The wound doesn't heal.

Usage notes

  • One of the four ri-verbs in Icelandic, the other being núa (to rub, massage; to wipe), snúa (to turn) and róa (to row).
  • As with the other ri-verbs, the past tense greri was originally pronounced with an e sound but is today pronounced with a é sound. There are therefore two spelling variants used: greri and gréri. The Icelandic Ministry of Education considers both variants to be equally correct,[1] but many speakers consider the original greri spelling to be the more correct one.

Conjugation

This verb needs an inflection-table template.

Synonyms

References

Old Norse

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *grōaną (to grow), from Proto-Indo-European *gʰreH₁- (to grow, become green). Cognate with Old English grōwan, Old Frisian grōwa, grōa, grōia, Old Dutch gruoien, Old High German gruoen.

Pronunciation

Verb

gróa (singular past indicative greri, plural past indicative greru, past participle gróinn)

  1. to grow (of plants)

Conjugation

Descendants

  • Danish: gro
  • Faroese: gróa, grógva
  • Icelandic: gróa
  • Norwegian:
    • Norwegian Bokmål: gro
    • Norwegian Nynorsk: gro
  • Swedish: gro