See also: Sehn

Central Franconian edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German sien, from Old High German *sian, northern variant of sehan, from Proto-Germanic *sehwaną.

The distribution of the forms sehn and siehn in the dialects is in line with the general distribution of -ē- and -ī- for Old High German -ia-, -io-. Compare the same contraction in Old Dutch sian.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

sehn (third-person singular present süht or seiht or sitt, past tense sooch, past participle jesehn or gesehn)

  1. (Ripuarian, northern Moselle Franconian) to see
    Dat süht doch ene Blende!
    A blind man could see that!

Usage notes edit

German edit

Pronunciation edit

  • Audio:(file)

Verb edit

sehn

  1. (colloquial, poetic, dated in formal prose) alternative form of sehen

Low German edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle Low German sên, from Old Saxon sehan. Compare German sehen, Dutch zien, English see, Danish se.

Pronunciation edit

  • (most regions) IPA(key): /seːn/, /sɛɪn/, /seɪn/, /zeːn/, /zɛɪn/, /zeɪn/
  • (Westphalia) IPA(key): /s̺eːn/, /s̺ɛɪn/, /s̺eɪn/, /s̺ɛːn/

Verb edit

sehn (third-person singular simple present süht, past tense seeg, past participle sehn, auxiliary verb hebben)

  1. (intransitive) to see; to look
    op wat sehnto look at something
    na wat sehnto look for something
  2. (intransitive, with na) to take care (of something or someone); to look (after someone)
  3. (transitive) to see (something); to view; to watch; to observe; to look at
  4. (transitive) to notice; to perceive; to realize
  5. (reflexive with a plural subject or transitive) to meet; to go to see

Conjugation edit

Further forms:

Derived terms edit