hoved
See also: hoved-
English
Verb
hoved
- (nonstandard) Misconstruction of hove, as past tense of heave.
- 2009, Liz Hunt, The Daily Telegraph, 18 Aug, "The Material Girl lives up to her name":
- So how the hearts of the paps must have leapt as Madonna plus children – and lover Jesus – hoved into view off the coast of Italy this week.
- 2009, Liz Hunt, The Daily Telegraph, 18 Aug, "The Material Girl lives up to her name":
Anagrams
Danish
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old Norse hǫfuð, haufuð, from Proto-Germanic *hafudą or *habudą, northern form of *haubudą, cf. English head, dialectal German Haupt, Dutch hoofd. The Germanic word goes back to Proto-Indo-European *káput, cognate with Latin caput (“head”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhoːəð/, [ˈho̝ːð̩˕˗ˠ]
Noun
hoved n (singular definite hovedet, plural indefinite hoveder)
- head (the body part with the brain and main sense organs)
- mind (the cognitive activities of a human being)
- person
- (figuratively) head (something with a form or a position that resembles a head, e.g. a vegetable or a page)
Declension
neuter gender |
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
nominative | hoved | hovedet | hoveder | hovederne |
genitive | hoveds | hovedets | hoveders | hovedernes |
Derived terms
Descendants
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Noun
hoved n (definite singular hovedet, indefinite plural hoveder, definite plural hovedene)
- (archaic) alternative form of hode (“head”)