glousen
Luxembourgish
Etymology
From Middle High German glosen. Compare dialectal or archaic German glosen. The Luxembourgish vowel (-ou- instead of -ue-) and the dated variant glouzen may hint at influence by Middle High German gluot, for which see English gleed.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈɡleu̯tsen/, [ˈɡləʊ̯tsən]
Verb
glousen (third-person singular present gloust, past participle gegloust, auxiliary verb hunn)
- to glow
Conjugation
| Regular | ||
|---|---|---|
| infinitive | glousen | |
| participle | gegloust | |
| auxiliary | hunn | |
| present indicative |
imperative | |
| 1st singular | glousen | — |
| 2nd singular | glous | glous |
| 3rd singular | gloust | — |
| 1st plural | glousen | — |
| 2nd plural | gloust | gloust |
| 3rd plural | glousen | — |
| (n) or (nn) indicates the Eifeler Regel. | ||
Derived terms
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