krølle

Danish

Etymology

From Middle Low German krullen, from Proto-Germanic *kruzlǭ, from Pre-Germanic *grus-, contracted from Proto-Indo-European *gurus- (twist, curl), same source as Persian گرس (gors, braid of hair).

Noun

krølle c (singular definite krøllen, plural indefinite krøller)

  1. curl

Declension

Derived terms

Verb

krølle (imperative krøl, infinitive at krølle, present tense krøller, past tense krøllede, perfect tense har krøllet)

  1. to curl

Conjugation

Derived terms

References

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Middle Low German krullen.

Verb

krølle (imperative krøll, present tense krøller, passive krølles, simple past and past participle krølla or krøllet, present participle krøllende)

  1. (also reflexive) to curl (e.g. hair)
  2. (also reflexive) to wrinkle
  3. krølle seg sammen: to curl up
  4. krølle sammen: to crumple (something)

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Middle Low German krullen.

Verb

krølle (present tense krøllar, past tense krølla, past participle krølla, passive infinitive krøllast, present participle krøllande, imperative krølle/krøll)

  1. (also reflexive) to curl (e.g. hair)
  2. (also reflexive) to wrinkle
  3. krølle saman: to crumple (something)

Alternative forms

References

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