riden

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See also: Riden

Danish

Noun

riden c

  1. (deprecated template usage) definite singular of ride

Middle Dutch

Etymology

From Old Dutch rīdan, from Proto-Germanic *rīdaną.

Pronunciation

Verb

riden

  1. to ride (on a horse or vehicle)
  2. to travel
  3. to suffer (a disease)
  4. (figuratively, of land) to be flooded from time to time (up and down, as if on a horse)
  5. (of an animal) to copulate, to have sexual intercourse

Inflection

Strong class 1
Infinitive riden
3rd sg. past rêet
3rd pl. past rēden
Past participle rēd
Infinitive riden
In genitive ridens
In dative ridene
Indicative Present Past
1st singular ride rêet
2nd singular rijts, rides rēets, rēdes
3rd singular rijt, ridet rêet
1st plural riden rēden
2nd plural rijt, ridet rēet, rēdet
3rd plural riden rēden
Subjunctive Present Past
1st singular ride rēde
2nd singular rijts, rides rēdes
3rd singular ride rēde
1st plural riden rēden
2nd plural rijt, ridet rēdet
3rd plural riden rēden
Imperative Present
Singular rijt, ride
Plural rijt, ridet
Present Past
Participle ridende rēd

Descendants

  • Dutch: rijden
  • Limburgish: rieje

Further reading


Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English rīdan, from Proto-Germanic *rīdaną. Cognates include Middle Dutch riden, Middle Low German riden, and Old Swedish rīþa.

Pronunciation

Verb

riden

  1. To ride on a mount; to move on an animal:
    1. To ride to war; to utilise cavalry:
      1. To lead or command on horseback; to serve at the head of a host.
      2. To pillage or loot while on horseback; to maraud or raid.
    2. To ride towards, on, or through a specific location.
    3. To joust or tilt; to participate in jousting.
    4. To ride in a parade; to march on horseback.
    5. To adventure on horseback.
  2. To use a vehicle or transport method other than a mount:
    1. To leave; to journey or go on a trip.
    2. To ride in a wheeled vehicle or a palanquin.
    3. To voyage or travel by water; to be on a vessel.
  3. (vulgar) To mount or mate; to undergo coitus with.
    • a. 1400, Geoffrey Chaucer, “ The Nun's Priest's Tale”, in The Canterbury Tales, lines 3168-3169:
      Womman is mannes Ioye and al his blis / ffor whan I feele a nyght your softe syde / Al be it that I may nat on yow ryde / ffor þat oure perche is maad so narwe allas [...]
      "Womankind is man's joy and all of his bliss" / for when I feel your soft side at night / Despite the fact that I can't ride on you / because our perch is made so narrowly [...]
  4. (of a vessel) To float; to set sail or move.
  5. (rare, Late Middle English) To move, to slide towards.
  6. (rare, Late Middle English) To sit on a stool or beam; to mount something as if it was a horse.
  7. (rare, Late Middle English) To remain, to dwell.
  8. (rare, Late Middle English) To undergo execution.

Conjugation

The template Template:enm-conj-table does not use the parameter(s):
4=riden, rideth, rideþ
6=riden, rideth, rideþ
14=ridde(n), rode(n), rede(n)
16=ridde(n), rode(n), rede(n)
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.

Related terms

Descendants

References


Middle Low German

Etymology

From Old Saxon rīdan (to ride), from Proto-Germanic *rīdaną. Cognate with English ride, Dutch rijden and German reiten.

Pronunciation

Verb

rîden

  1. to ride

Conjugation

Related terms


Swedish

Verb

riden

  1. (deprecated template usage) past participle of rida