OriginFrom Old Norse skari, from Middle Low German schāre, from Old Saxon scara, from Proto-Germanic *skarō. Akin to English share. Doublet of skar (Etymology 4).
- masculinea host, crowd
- masculinea hard and rough crust as top layer of snow
- masculine, uncountablesnow with such a crust
- intransitiveto crowd
- intransitiveto go, walk, march together as a crowd
- transitiveto put or place in a dense row or crowd
- ambitransitiveto dig in, gather and drop ashes upon the embers in a fireplace
Formsskaren(definite, singular) · skarar(indefinite, plural) · skarane(definite, plural) · skarar(present) · skara(past) · skara(participle, past) · skarast(infinitive, passive) · skarande(participle, present) · skare(imperative) · skar(imperative) · skara(alternative) · skårrå(alternative, dialectal)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0