From Middle English wissen (“to instruct, enlighten, advise, admonish; guide, direct, control, manage, rule”), from Old English wisian (“to direct, instruct, guide, direct, rule; show, point out; declare, make known”). Related to wise and more remotely to wit. See Proto-Indo-European *weyd- (“see, know”).
wisse (third-person singular simple present wisses, present participle wissing, simple past and past participle wissed)
From Middle Dutch wisse, from Old Dutch *withtha, from Proto-Germanic *wiþjǭ. The development *-þj- > -ss- is also found in smidse (from earlier smisse); original *-þþ- becomes -tt- in lat, mot.
wisse f (plural wissen)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
wisse
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
wisse
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wisse
Inherited from Central Franconian wesse, from Middle High German wizzen, from Old High German izzan, from Proto-West Germanic *witan, from Proto-Germanic *witaną.[1]
Cognate with German wissen and German wëssen.
wisse
Irregular with past tense and conditional mood | |||
---|---|---|---|
infinitive | wisse | ||
participle | gewusst | ||
auxiliary | wisse | ||
present indicative |
past indicative |
conditional | |
ich | wees | wusst | wisst |
du | weest | wusst | wisst |
er/sie/es | wees | wusst | wisst |
meer | wisse | wusste | wisste |
deer | wissd | wusst | wisst |
sie | wisse | wusste | wisste |
The use of the present participle is uncommon, but can be made with the suffix -end. |
From wissen (“to guide”) + -e (agentive suffix).
wisse
wisse