/nʲiːkʲtʲɪ/
OriginCognate with Latvian nikt (“to suffer; to wear out”), as well as Proto-Slavic *niknǫti (“to droop, wilt”) (though not to the latter in the sense of "to arise"); see the Proto-Slavic for more.
Formsnỹkti(canonical) · nỹksta(present, third-person) · nỹko(past, third-person) · nykstù(error-unrecognized-form) · nyksti̇̀(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · nỹksta(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkstame(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkstam(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkstate(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · nỹkstat(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · nỹksta(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · nykaũ(error-unrecognized-form) · nykai̇̃(error-unrecognized-form, second-person) · nỹko(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkome(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkom(error-unrecognized-form) · nỹkote(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · nỹkot(error-unrecognized-form, plural, second-person) · nỹko(error-unrecognized-form, plural, third-person) · nỹkdavau(error-unrecognized-form)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0