cigan
Old English
Etymology
ġe- + ċīeġan from Proto-Germanic *kawjaną (“to call, name”), from Proto-Indo-European *gewH- (“to call, cry out”).
Verb
cīgan
Conjugation
Conjugation of cīgan (weak class 1)
| infinitive | cīgan | tō cīgenne |
|---|---|---|
| indicative | present | past |
| 1st-person singular | cīge | cīgde |
| 2nd-person singular | cīgest | cīgdest |
| 3rd-person singular | cīgeþ | cīgde |
| plural | cīgaþ | cīgdon |
| subjunctive | present | past |
| singular | cīge | cīgde |
| plural | cīgen | cīgden |
| imperative | ||
| singular | cīg | |
| plural | cīgaþ | |
| participle | present | past |
| cīgende | (ġe)cīged | |
Derived terms
- ācīgan (“to call”)
- edcīgan (“to recall”)
- eftgecīgan (“to call back”)
- forþacīgan (“to call forth”)
- forþgecīgan (“to call forth”)
- ġecīgan (“to incite”)
- ġeedcīgan (“to recall”)
- ġeincīgan (“to invoke”)
- incīgan (“to invoke”)
Descendants
- ⇒ Old English: ġeċīeġan
- Middle English: ȝeciȝen, icheien
- ⇒ Old English: ġeċīeġan
References
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