dygna
Appearance
Swedish
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From the noun dygn (“a day and a night”) + -a.
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]dygna (present dygnar, preterite dygnade, supine dygnat, imperative dygna)
- (colloquial) To stay awake for twenty-four hours.
- 2016, Pernilla Gesén, Jennas första (Dagbok för utvalda 1), Massolit Förlagsgrupp, →ISBN:
- Så vad gör man när man dygnar?
- So what do you do when you pull an all-nighter?
Conjugation
[edit]active | passive | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
infinitive | dygna | — | ||
supine | dygnat | — | ||
imperative | dygna | — | ||
imper. plural1 | dygnen | — | ||
present | past | present | past | |
indicative | dygnar | dygnade | — | — |
ind. plural1 | dygna | dygnade | — | — |
subjunctive2 | dygne | dygnade | — | — |
present participle | dygnande | |||
past participle | — |
1 Archaic. 2 Dated. See the appendix on Swedish verbs.
Further reading
[edit]- dygna in Svensk ordbok.