OriginFrom Old Norse gaula (“to howl”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰeh₂w- (“to gape, yawn”), related to Lithuanian gomurys (“palate”).
- weakto yell, to bellow
- weakto howl
- weakto low
Formsgaulaði(indicative, past, singular, third-person) · gaulað(supine) · gaulaður(masculine, nominative, singular) · gauluð(feminine, nominative, singular) · gaulað(neuter, nominative, singular) · gaulaðir(masculine, nominative, plural) · gaulaðar(feminine, nominative, plural) · gauluð(neuter, nominative, plural) · gaulaðan(accusative, masculine, singular) · gaulaða(accusative, feminine, singular) · gaulað(accusative, neuter, singular) · gaulaða(accusative, masculine, plural) · gaulaðar(accusative, feminine, plural) · gauluð(accusative, neuter, plural) · gauluðum(dative, masculine, singular) · gaulaðri(dative, feminine, singular) · gauluðu(dative, neuter, singular) · gauluðum(dative, masculine, plural) · gauluðum(dative, feminine, plural) · gauluðum(dative, neuter, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0