frieren
German
Etymology
From Middle High German vrieren, vriesen, from Old High German friosan, from Proto-West Germanic *freusan, from Proto-Germanic *freusaną, from Proto-Indo-European *prews-. The -r- was generalised from the Middle High German past forms (as in verlieren). Cognate with German Low German freren, fresen, Dutch vriezen, English freeze, Danish fryse.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈfriːrən/, [ˈfʁiː.ʁən], [ˈfʁiː.ɐn], [fʁi(ː)ɐ̯n]
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -iːʁən
Verb
frieren (class 2 strong, third-person singular present friert, past tense fror, past participle gefroren, past subjunctive fröre, auxiliary haben or sein)
- (intransitive, of living beings or body parts) to be cold, feel cold [auxiliary haben] (unlike English freeze neither informal nor expressing extreme cold)
- Synonym: kalt sein (impersonal with dative)
- Frierst du? ― Are you cold?
- Meine Hände frieren. ― My hands are cold.
- (dated or southern, transitive, of body parts, or impersonal of living beings) to be cold, feel cold [auxiliary haben]
- Friert es dich? ― Are you cold?
- Die Hände frieren mich. ― My hands are cold.
- (intransitive, impersonal, of the weather) to freeze, be freezing, be below 0 degrees celsius [auxiliary haben]
- Heute Nacht soll es frieren. ― It’s going to freeze tonight.
- (intransitive, of liquid or viscous substances, rare) Synonym of gefrieren (“to freeze, become hard through cold”) [auxiliary sein]
Conjugation
Lua error in Module:utilities at line 142: attempt to perform arithmetic on local 'h' (a nil value)
Derived terms
Further reading
- “frieren” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- “frieren” in Uni Leipzig: Wortschatz-Lexikon
- “frieren” in Duden online
- “frieren” in OpenThesaurus.de
- Friedrich Kluge (1883), “frieren”, in , John Francis Davis, transl., Etymological Dictionary of the German Language, published 1891
Spanish
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.