ondrædan

Old English

Etymology

From West Germanic *andarādan. Cognate with Old Frisian ondrēda, Old Saxon andrādan, Old Dutch andrādan, Old High German intrātan. Etymologically equivalent to on- + rǣdan, but reanalyzed as *on-drǣdan rather than *ond-rǣdan during the prehistory of Old English.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /onˈdræː.dɑn/

Verb

ondrǣdan

  1. to be scared (+accusative or genitive of something) (often with a dative reflexive pronoun)
    Ondrǣtst þū þē þīestra?
    Are you afraid of the dark?

Conjugation

Descendants

  • Middle English: adreden, dreden
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