snuble

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Danish[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Presumably derived from snubbe (to truncate a word, interrupt in a rude manner), from Old Norse snubba (to speak harshly to, scold), which, like the source of English snip, is probably imitative in some manner.[1] Compare English snub (to rebuff, spurn).

Verb[edit]

snuble (imperative snubl, infinitive at snuble, present tense snubler, past tense snublede, perfect tense snublet)

  1. to stumble

Conjugation[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “snub”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.

Norwegian Bokmål[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Related to dialectal snubbe

Verb[edit]

snuble (imperative snubl or snuble, present tense snubler, passive snubles, simple past and past participle snubla or snublet, present participle snublende)

  1. to stumble, trip (over something)
    • 2013, Johannes Anyuru, En storm kom fra paradiset[1], Forlaget Press, →ISBN:
      Han snubler fram gjennom høye gresset, han hører flyene over trærne, han snubler over røtter og nedfalne greiner.
      He stumbles forward through the tall grass, he hears the planes above the trees, he stumbles over roots and fallen branches.

References[edit]

Norwegian Nynorsk[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Related to dialectal snubbe

Verb[edit]

snuble (present tense snublar, past tense snubla, past participle snubla, passive infinitive snublast, present participle snublande, imperative snuble/snubl)

  1. to stumble, trip (over something)

Alternative forms[edit]

References[edit]