/røyst/
OriginFrom Old Norse raust, ultimately from a Proto-Germanic derivative of Proto-Indo-European *h₃reyH- (“to flow, boil, stream, move”). Related to Proto-Germanic *runsiz (“river”).
Cognate with Danish røst, Faroese reyst, Norwegian Nynorsk røyst and Swedish röst.
Formsraustar(genitive, singular) · raustir(nominative, plural) · raust(indefinite, nominative, singular) · raustin(definite, nominative, singular) · raustir(indefinite, nominative, plural) · raustirnar(definite, nominative, plural) · raust(accusative, indefinite, singular) · raustina(accusative, definite, singular) · raustir(accusative, indefinite, plural) · raustirnar(accusative, definite, plural) · raust(dative, indefinite, singular) · raustinni(dative, definite, singular) · raustum(dative, indefinite, plural) · raustunum(dative, definite, plural) · raustar(genitive, indefinite, singular) · raustarinnar(definite, genitive, singular) · rausta(genitive, indefinite, plural) · raustanna(definite, genitive, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0