kóka
Faroese
Etymology
From Old Norse *koka, from late Proto-Germanic *kukōną (or through a Middle Low German intermediate), either from *kukaz (“cook”) from Latin coquus, or borrowed from Vulgar Latin *coco, cocere, from Latin coquō, coquere.
Verb
kóka (third person singular past indicative kókaði, third person plural past indicative kókaðu, supine kókað)
Conjugation
| v-30 | ||||
| infinitive | kóka | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| present participle | kókandi | |||
| past participle a6 | kókaður | |||
| supine | kókað | |||
| number | singular | plural | ||
| person | first | second | third | all |
| indicative | eg | tú | hann/hon/tað | vit, tit, teir/tær/tey, tygum |
| present | kóki | kókar | kókar | kóka |
| past | kókaði | kókaði | kókaði | kókaðu |
| imperative | – | tú | – | tit |
| present | — | kóka! | — | kókið! |
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