sige

See also: SiGe and siȝe

Cebuano

Etymology

From es + sigue, from es + seguir, from Vulgar Latin *sequire, remodelled from Latin sequī, present active infinitive of sequor.

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: si‧ge

Adverb

sige

  1. always
  2. OK

Interjection

sige

  1. OK

Danish

Alternative forms

  • sæge (rare), sæje (rare), seje (rare)

Etymology

From Old Danish sighæ, sæghiæ, from Old Norse segja, from Proto-Germanic *sagjaną, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *sekʷ-.

Verb

sige (imperative sig, infinitive at sige, present tense siger, past tense sagde, perfect tense har sagt)

  1. to say
  2. to tell
  3. to mean

Derived terms


Middle English

Noun

sige

  1. Alternative form of siȝe

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse siga

Verb

sige (imperative sig, present tense siger, passive siges, simple past seg or seig, past participle seget, present participle sigende)

  1. to sag, sink, slide
  2. to ooze, seep, trickle
  3. to move slowly, drift, glide

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Verb

sige (imperative sig, present tense sig, simple past seig, past participle sige, present participle sigande)

  1. Alternative form of siga

Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *segaz (victory), from Proto-Indo-European *segʰ-. Akin to Old Frisian sige (victory), Old Saxon sigi (Middle Low German sege), Dutch zege, Old High German sigi, sigu (German Sieg), Old Norse sigr (Danish sejr, old spelling before the writing reform of 1948 Seier, Swedish seger), Gothic 𐍃𐌹𐌲𐌹𐍃 (sigis), Sanskrit सहस् (sáhas) - power, victory, Avestan 𐬵𐬀𐬰𐬀𐬥𐬵 (hazanh, power, victory)[1].

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsije/

Noun

siġe m (nominative plural siġas)

  1. victory, success

Declension

Derived terms

  • siġebēacn n — banner, emblem of victory, trophy, cross (of Christ)
  • siġebēah m — victor's circlet, crown
  • siġebēam m — tree of victory, cross
  • siġebēarn n. — victor-child, Christ
  • siġebeorht — victorious
  • siġebeorn m — victorious hero
  • siġebrōðor m — victorious brother
  • siġebȳme f — trump of victory
  • siġecempa m — victorious champion
  • siġecwēn f — victorious queen
  • siġedēma m — victorious judge
  • siġedryhten m — lord of victory, God
  • siġeēadig — victorious
  • siġefæst, siġefest — victorious, triumphant
  • siġefæstan, siġefæstnian — to triumph: crown as victor
  • siġefæstnes f — triumph, victory
  • siġefolc n — victorious people
  • siġeġealdor n — victory-bringing charm
  • siġeġefeoht n. victory
  • siġegyrd f — victory-bringing rod
  • siġehrēmiġ — rejoicing in victory
  • siġehrēþ f — fame gained by victory; confidence or joy of victory
  • siġehrēþiġ — victorious, triumphant
  • siġehwīl f — hour of victory
  • siġelēan n — reward of victory
  • siġelēas — not victorious, defeated
  • sigelēoþ n — song of victory
  • siġeliċ — victorious
  • siġemēċe m — victorious sword
  • siġenes
  • siġerīċe — victorious, triumphant
  • siġerōf — victorious, triumphant
  • siġesceorp n — ornament of victory
  • siġesīþ m — successful expedition
  • siġespēd f — success
  • siġetācen n — emblem of victory, sign
  • siġetīber n — sacrifice for victory
  • siġetorht brilliant in victory
  • siġetūdor n — dominating race
  • siġeðēod f — victorious people
  • siġeðrēat m — victorious troop
  • siġeðūf m — triumphal banner
  • siġewǣpen n — victorious weapon
  • siġewang m — field of victory

Descendants

References

  1. Etymology of sigu (Old High German)

Tagalog

Interjection

sige

  1. OK
  2. continue
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