Reikšmė (Anglų k.)

past participle of werden

werden

  1. (auxiliary, irregular) will, to be going to, forms the future tense
  2. (auxiliary, irregular, subjunctive) would; forms the subjunctive tense of most verbs
  3. (auxiliary, irregular) to be done; forms the passive voice
  4. (copulative, irregular) to become; to get; to grow; to turn
  5. (irregular) for one to begin or come to feel or experience
  6. (colloquial, copulative, irregular) to be; to happen; to occur (in the future)
  7. (colloquial, irregular) to be acceptable; to function correctly; to have the desired result or effect

Dažnis

A2
Tarmės

Ciuricho kantonas

Ciuricho kantonas

worde

Fribūro kantonas

Fribūro kantonas

worde

Fribūro kantonas

Fribūro kantonas

chua

Apencelis-Inerodenas

Apencelis-Inerodenas

worde

Duomenis pateikė: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Etimologija (Anglų k.)

The prefix ge- was originally a marker of the perfective aspect. As such it was principally not added to verbs like werden that were by definition (mostly) perfective. (Remnants of this distinction are still found in dialects; compare Luxembourgish bruecht, fonnt, komm.) In modern German, all verbs with initial stress take the prefix ge-. The exception of worden has euphonic reasons, because as an auxiliary it is always combined with another past participle. This distinction between geworden (full verb) and worden (auxiliary) fully established itself only during the 19th century, however.

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