/ˈkraiːða/
OriginFrom Old Norse grœða, from Proto-Germanic *grōþijaną (related to *grōaną (“to grow”)). Both ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *gʰreH₁- (“to grow, become green”).
- transitive, weakto make (land) grown with plants
- transitive, weakto implant
- transitive, weakto heal
- ambitransitive, weakto profit, to make (money)
Formsgræddi(indicative, past, singular, third-person) · grætt(supine) · græddur(masculine, nominative, singular) · grædd(feminine, nominative, singular) · grætt(neuter, nominative, singular) · græddir(masculine, nominative, plural) · græddar(feminine, nominative, plural) · grædd(neuter, nominative, plural) · græddan(accusative, masculine, singular) · grædda(accusative, feminine, singular) · grætt(accusative, neuter, singular) · grædda(accusative, masculine, plural) · græddar(accusative, feminine, plural) · grædd(accusative, neuter, plural) · græddum(dative, masculine, singular) · græddri(dative, feminine, singular) · græddu(dative, neuter, singular) · græddum(dative, masculine, plural) · græddum(dative, feminine, plural) · græddum(dative, neuter, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0