skrike
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English skriken, a borrowing from Old Norse skríkja (“to scream”) (compare Old English sċrīċ, sċrēċ > English shriek/screech), literally "bird with a shrill call," referring to a thrush, possibly imitative of its call. Attested from c 1573.
Verb
skrike (third-person singular simple present skrikes, present participle skriking, simple past and past participle skriked)
Etymology 2
From Middle English skrike, scryke (also skryche, schryke, shryke). Cognate with Old Frisian skrichte, Middle Low German schrichte.
Noun
skrike (plural skrikes)
References
- A Dictionary of North East Dialect, Bill Griffiths, 2005, Northumbria University Press.
- A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, J. R. Clark Hall, 1984, University of Toronto Press.
- Journal of English and Germanic Philology: Volume 29, 1930, Univeristy of Illinois Press.
- 'Scric', Etymonline.com.
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Onomatopoeic (lydord)
Verb
skrike (imperative skrik, present tense skriker, passive skrikes, simple past skrek or skreik, past participle skreket, present participle skrikende)
Related terms
- skrik (noun)
Norwegian Nynorsk
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