OriginFrom the same paradigm as miglà and miegóti (“to sleep”). Cognate with Latvian migt (“to fall asleep, make someone fall asleep”).
Formsmi̇̀gti(canonical) · miñga(present, third-person) · mi̇̀go(past, third-person) · migtù(error-unrecognized-form) · migti̇̀(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · miñga(error-unrecognized-form) · miñgame(error-unrecognized-form) · miñgam(error-unrecognized-form) · miñgate(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · miñgat(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · miñga(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · migaũ(error-unrecognized-form) · migai̇̃(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · mi̇̀go(error-unrecognized-form) · mi̇̀gome(error-unrecognized-form) · mi̇̀gom(error-unrecognized-form) · mi̇̀gote(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · mi̇̀got(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · mi̇̀go(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · mi̇̀gdavau(error-unrecognized-form)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0