finden
[ˈfɪndn̩] · verb
Meaning
- to find; to discover
- to think, to consider, to find
- to find one's way
- to be found, can be found
Etymology / origin
From Middle High German vinden, from Old High German findan, from Proto-West Germanic *finþan, from Proto-Germanic *finþaną. Cognate with Bavarian findn, Low German finden, Dutch vinden, English find, Danish finde.
- finde(Danish)→
- find(English)→
- vinden(Dutch)→
- finden(Low German)→
- findn(Bavarian)→
- *finþaną(gem-pro)→
- *finþan(gmw-pro)→
- findan(Old High German)→
- vinden(Middle High German)→
- *pent-(ine-pro)→
- finden (German)
- Relations: root, inh, inh, inh, inh, cog, cog, cog, cog, cog
Related words
*pent-(ine-pro)vinden(Middle High German)findan(Old High German)*finþan(gmw-pro)*finþaną(gem-pro)findn(Bavarian)finden(Low German)vinden(Dutch)find(English)finde(Danish)vennen(Cimbrian)vènnan(Cimbrian)finnen(Low German)fannen(Luxembourgish)finna(Norwegian Nynorsk)findig(Old English)finne(Pennsylvania German)געפֿינען(Yiddish)
Descendant words
- findn(Bavarian) (cog)
- vennen(Cimbrian) (cog)
- vènnan(Cimbrian) (cog)
- finde(Danish) (cog)
- find(English) (cog)
- finnen(Low German) (cog)
- fannen(Luxembourgish) (cog)
- finna(Norwegian Nynorsk) (cog)
- findig(Old English) (cog)
- finne(Pennsylvania German) (cog)
- געפֿינען(Yiddish) (cog)
Sources
No citations have been attached yet.