OriginBorrowed from Middle Low German dosich, from Proto-West Germanic *dusīg. Cognate of English dizzy. By surface analysis, dåsa + -ig (“-y”).
- drowsy (in a relaxed manner, for example after lying out in the sun)
“Antihistaminer kan göra så att man blir dåsig” — Antihistamines can make you feel drowsy
Formsdåsigare(comparative) · dåsigast(superlative) · dåsig(error-unrecognized-form, indefinite, positive) · dåsigare(comparative, error-unrecognized-form, indefinite) · dåsigast(error-unrecognized-form, indefinite, superlative) · dåsigt(indefinite, neuter, positive, singular) · dåsigare(comparative, indefinite, neuter, singular) · dåsigast(indefinite, neuter, singular, superlative) · dåsiga(indefinite, plural, positive) · dåsigare(comparative, indefinite, plural) · dåsigast(indefinite, plural, superlative) · dåsige(archaic, indefinite, masculine, plural, positive) · dåsigare(archaic, comparative, indefinite, masculine, plural) · dåsigast(archaic, indefinite, masculine, plural, superlative) · dåsige(definite, masculine, positive, singular) · dåsigare(comparative, definite, masculine, singular) · dåsigaste(definite, masculine, singular, superlative) · dåsiga(definite, error-unrecognized-form, positive) · dåsigare(comparative, definite, error-unrecognized-form) · dåsigaste(definite, error-unrecognized-form, superlative)