spýja

Icelandic

Etymology

From Old Norse spýja (compare Faroese spýggja, Norwegian, Swedish and Danish spy), from Proto-Germanic *spīwaną, whence also Dutch spuwen, German speien, English spew, Gothic 𐍃𐍀𐌴𐌹𐍅𐌰𐌽 (speiwan). Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ptyēw- (to spit, vomit). Non-Germanic cognates include Old Armenian թուք (tʿukʿ), Persian تف (spittle), Ossetian ту (tu, spittle), Ancient Greek πτύω (ptúō, I spit out), Latin spuo, Old Church Slavonic пльвати (plĭvati) (Russian плевать (plevatʹ)) and Sanskrit ष्ठीवति (ṣṭhīvati, to spit).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈspiːja/
    Rhymes: -iːja

Verb

spýja (strong verb, third-person singular past indicative spjó, third-person plural past indicative spjóu, supine spúið) or spýja (weak verb, third-person singular past indicative spúði, supine spúið)

  1. to vomit
  2. to spit out, make gush forth

Conjugation

Strong or (increasingly commonly) weak. May also be mixed, with the strong forms being retained mostly in the singular past indicative forms.

Noun

spýja f (genitive singular spýju, nominative plural spýjur)

  1. vomit
  2. a thick shower of rain in windy conditions
  3. a small avalanche

Declension


Old Norse

Alternative forms

  • *spía

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *spīwaną.

Verb

spýja (singular past indicative spjó, plural past indicative spjó, past participle spúinn)

  1. (transitive, with dative) to spew, to vomit
    hon spjó bloði
    she threw up blood

Conjugation

Descendants

Noun

spýja f (genitive spýju)

  1. vomit

Declension

References

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