/sɑːkna/
OriginFrom Old Swedish sakna, from Old Norse sakna (“miss”).
- to miss, to lack, to want, to be without
“Jag saknar dig.” — I miss you.
“Cykeln saknar ett hjul.” — The bicycle lacks a wheel.
Formssaknar(present) · saknade(preterite) · saknat(supine) · sakna(imperative) · sakna(active, infinitive) · saknas(infinitive, passive) · saknat(active, supine) · saknats(passive, supine) · sakna(active, imperative) · -(imperative, passive) · saknen(active, archaic, error-unrecognized-form) · -(archaic, error-unrecognized-form, passive) · saknar(active, indicative, present) · saknade(active, indicative, past) · saknas(indicative, passive, present) · saknades(indicative, passive, past) · sakna(active, archaic, error-unrecognized-form, present) · saknade(active, archaic, error-unrecognized-form, past) · saknas(archaic, error-unrecognized-form, passive, present) · saknades(archaic, error-unrecognized-form, passive, past)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0