/kʀɑŋk/
OriginFrom Middle High German kranc, from Old High German *krank, from Proto-West Germanic *krank (“weak”).
Formskranken(masculine) · krankt(neuter) · méi krank(comparative) · am kranksten(superlative) · hien ass krank(masculine, predicative, singular) · si ass krank(feminine, predicative, singular) · et ass krank(neuter, predicative, singular) · si si krank(plural, predicative) · si sinn krank(plural, predicative) · kranken(accusative, attributive, masculine, nominative, singular, with-determiner) · krank(accusative, attributive, feminine, nominative, singular, with-determiner) · krankt(accusative, attributive, neuter, nominative, singular, with-determiner) · krank(accusative, attributive, nominative, plural, with-determiner) · kranken(accusative, masculine, nominative, singular, without-determiner) · krank(accusative, feminine, nominative, singular, without-determiner) · krankes(accusative, neuter, nominative, singular, without-determiner) · kranker(accusative, nominative, plural, without-determiner) · kranken(dative, masculine, singular, with-head) · kranker(dative, feminine, singular, with-head) · kranken(dative, neuter, singular, with-head)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0