rogge

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See also: Rogge and Rögge

Dutch[edit]

Dutch Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nl

Etymology[edit]

From Middle Dutch rogge, from Old Dutch *roggo, from Proto-West Germanic *roggō, from Proto-Germanic *ruggô, from Proto-Indo-European *Hrugʰís.

Cognate with Limburgish rogke, West Flemish rogge, Old Saxon roggo, Middle Low German rogge, Low German Rogg, Plautdietsch Rogg, Old High German rocko, Middle High German rocke, German Rocken, Mòcheno rocken, Old Frisian rogga, North Frisian Roog, Saterland Frisian Roage and West Frisian rogge. More distant Germanic cognates are Old English ryġe, Middle English rye, English rye, Scots rye, Yola ree, Old Norse rugr, Icelandic rúgur, Faroese rugur, Norwegian Bokmål rug, Swedish råg, Danish rug, Elfdalian rug, Scanian ruğ, Gutnish ryg.

More distantly related to Latvian rudzis, Lithuanian rugỹs, Old Prussian ruggis, Russian рожь (rožʹ), Old Church Slavonic ръжь (rŭžĭ), Czech rež, Polish reż.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: rog‧ge

Noun[edit]

rogge c (uncountable)

  1. rye, Secale cereale

Derived terms[edit]

-general:

-types of rye:

-rye products:

Descendants[edit]

  • Afrikaans: rog
  • Jersey Dutch: rôx
  • Papiamentu: rog (dated)

Italian[edit]

Noun[edit]

rogge f

  1. plural of roggia

Anagrams[edit]

Northern Sami[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (Kautokeino) IPA(key): /ˈroɡːɡe/

Verb[edit]

rogge

  1. inflection of roggat:
    1. first-person dual present indicative
    2. third-person plural past indicative