[ˈfadə]
OprindelseFrom Middle Low German vāten, from Old Saxon *fatōn, from Proto-West Germanic *fatōn, from Proto-Germanic *fatōną. Cognate with Swedish fatta, Norwegian Bokmål fatte, Dutch vatten and German fassen.
- to understand or grasp the true meaning or significance of something.
- to understand or grasp the thinking or behaviour of (someone).
- to begin to feel a certain emotion
- to take, to do
- to take hold of; to seize. except in the saying at tage fat (literally “to take hold (to embark on something”).
- rareto surround with a frame, setting, etc.
Formerfat(imperative) · at fatte(infinitive) · fatter(present) · fattede(past) · fattet(perfect) · fatter(active, present) · fattes(passive, present) · fattede(active, past) · fattedes(passive, past) · fatte(active, infinitive) · fattes(infinitive, passive) · fat(active, imperative) · -(imperative, passive) · fattende(participle, present) · fattet(participle, past) · auxiliary verb have(participle, past) · fatten(gerund, participle)
Kilde: Wiktionary