Danish
Etymology
From Old Danish høde, from Old Norse hœta, from Proto-Germanic *hwōtijaną, cognate with Swedish höta (obsolete) (now replaced by hota), Gothic 𐍈𐍉𐍄𐌾𐌰𐌽 (ƕōtjan).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /høːðə/, [ˈhøðð̩]
Verb
høde (past tense hødede, past participle hødet)
- (archaic, dialect) to threaten with the hand
1819, Adam Oehlenschläger, “Nordens Guder”, in Kogleriet paa Heden[1], volume 3336:Da mon med Miølner høde
Den Herre kiæk og bold;
Han vilde slaae til Døde
I Hast den arge Trold- Then the brave and bold lord would threaten with Mjølnir; in great haste, he would slay the evil troll
- 1824, N.F.S. Grundtvig, Nyaars-Morgen, vv. 166-172, in: Poetiske Skrifter, vol. 5, p. 215
https://kalliope.org/da/text/grundtvig2018092206
Ja, hører mig, Brødre,
I Skjoldunge-Land,
Hvis Ammer og Mødre
Var Døttre af Dan,
Hvis Hamre har hødet,
Og tonet med Klang, ...- Hear me, brothers, in the Land of Skjoldungs, you whose nurses and mothers were daughters of Dan, whose hammers have threatened and rung loudly...
1919, Johannes V. Jensen, Norne-Gæst, page 230:Folk var hensynsløsere nu end i Fortiden, hvor man hødede meget og larmede livsfarligt en Ugestid, uden Blodsudgydelse, nu stak man tiende og paa Stedet, havde gjort Knivene lange.- People were more reckless now than in the past, when they threatened a lot and made a dangerous noise a week, without shed of blood, now they stabbed silently and immediately, they had made the knives longer.
Conjugation
Conjugation of høde
|
active |
passive
|
| present
|
høder
|
hødes
|
| past
|
hødede
|
hødedes
|
| infinitive
|
høde
|
hødes
|
| imperative
|
hød
|
—
|
|
participle
|
| present
|
hødende
|
| past
|
hødet (auxiliary verb have)
|
| gerund
|
høden
|
|
References