vinter

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See also: Vinter

Danish

Etymology

From Old Danish wintær, from Old Norse vintr, from Proto-Germanic *wintruz (winter).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈvenˀdɐ/, [ˈve̝nˀd̥ɐ], [ˈve̝nˀd̥ɒ̽], [ˈve̝nˀtɒ̽]

Noun

vinter c (singular definite vinteren, plural indefinite vintre)

  1. (season) winter

Inflection

Descendants

  • Norwegian Bokmål: vinter

See also

Seasons in Danish · årstider (layout · text) · category
forår (spring) sommer (summer) efterår (autumn) vinter (winter)

Middle English

Noun

vinter

  1. Alternative form of viniter

Norwegian Bokmål

Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Etymology

From Old Norse vetr, from Proto-Germanic *wintruz (winter).

Noun

vinter m (definite singular vinteren, indefinite plural vintere or vintre or vintrer, definite plural vinterne or vintrene)

  1. winter

Derived terms

References

See also

Seasons in Norwegian Bokmål · årstider (layout · text) · category
vår (spring) sommer (summer) høst (autumn) vinter (winter)

Norwegian Nynorsk

Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Old East Norse vintr, from Proto-Germanic *wintruz (winter). Akin to English winter.

Pronunciation

Noun

vinter m (definite singular vinteren, indefinite plural vintrar, definite plural vintrane)

  1. winter

Derived terms

References


Old Swedish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old Norse vintr, from Proto-Germanic *wintruz.

Noun

vinter m

  1. winter

Declension

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head=vinter
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Descendants


Swedish

Etymology

From Old Swedish vinter, from Old Norse vintr, from Proto-Germanic *wintruz (winter).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈvɪntɛr/
  • audio:(file)

Noun

vinter c

  1. winter; the coldest of the four seasons; either defined by three months between two fixed dates, or, in a meteorological sense, any period during which the average temperature is below freezing.

Declension

See also

References