Reikšmė (Anglų k.)

  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

A1
Tarmės

Ciuricho kantonas

Ciuricho kantonas

werde

Bazelio sritis

Bazelio sritis

wärde

Bazelio sritis

Bazelio sritis

wäärde

Apencelis-Inerodenas

Apencelis-Inerodenas

werde

Graubiundenas

Graubiundenas

werde

Graubiundenas

Graubiundenas

werda

Fribūro kantonas

Fribūro kantonas

werde

Bazelio sritis

Bazelio sritis

werde

Duomenis pateikė: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Tariamas kaip (IPA)
/ˈveːʁdən/
Etimologija (Anglų k.)

In summary

From Middle High German wërden, from Old High German werdan, from Proto-West Germanic *werþan, from Proto-Germanic *werþaną. Cognate with Dutch worden, obsolete English worth, Swedish varda, Norwegian Nynorsk verta, and also with Latin vertō (“to turn”). The use as a passive auxiliary is old and found throughout West Germanic, but the use as a future auxiliary is a Middle High German innovation. It originated in inchoative constructions with the present participle: er wirt lachende (“he starts laughing, is about to laugh, will laugh”). Since the 14th century, the participle began to be replaced with the infinitive, probably by analogy with the older future auxiliaries wollen (“will”) and sollen (“shall”). The last two have been displaced by werden in Modern German but survive dialectally.

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