Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/rairōn
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *Hrey- (“to scream, roar, howl, bark”). Cognate with Lithuanian ri̇́eti (“to scream; to bark at, scold”, j-type), Latvian riet (“to bark”), Russian ра́ять (rájatʹ, “to sound”) and possibly Sanskrit रै (rai, “noise, barking sound”). This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term. Suffix?
Verb
*rairōn
Inflection
| Class 2 weak | ||
|---|---|---|
| Infinitive | *rairōn | |
| 1st sg. past | *rairōdā | |
| Infinitive | *rairōn | |
| Genitive infin. | *rairōnijas | |
| Dative infin. | *rairōnijē | |
| Instrum. infin. | *rairōniju | |
| Indicative | Present | Past |
| 1st singular | *rairō | *rairōdā |
| 2nd singular | *rairōs | *rairōdēs, *rairōdōs |
| 3rd singular | *rairōþ | *rairōdē, *rairōdā |
| 1st plural | *rairōm | *rairōdum |
| 2nd plural | *rairōþ | *rairōdud |
| 3rd plural | *rairōnþ | *rairōdun |
| Subjunctive | Present | Past |
| 1st singular | *rairō | *rairōdī |
| 2nd singular | *rairōs | *rairōdī |
| 3rd singular | *rairō | *rairōdī |
| 1st plural | *rairōm | *rairōdīm |
| 2nd plural | *rairōþ | *rairōdīd |
| 3rd plural | *rairōn | *rairōdīn |
| Imperative | Present | |
| Singular | *rairō | |
| Plural | *rairōþ | |
| Present | Past | |
| Participle | *rairōndī | *rairōd |