ᛒᛡᚱᚢᛏᛉ

Etymology
From, the 2nd singular present indicative of. The ᛡ (A) present in between the ᛒ (b) and ᚱ (r) represents a svarabhakti (epenthetic) vowel, which however is not seen in the Old Norse orthography (brýt-) or in cognate words (such as 🇨🇬). Compare,.

Verb

 * 1) [you/he/she/it] breaks, destroys
 * 2) * 7th century, inscription on the Björketorp stone:
 * "gmq-pro"

- ᚼᚱᚼᚷᛖᚢ ¶ ᚺᚼᛖᚱᚼᛗᚼᛚᚼᚢᛋᛉ ¶ ᚢᛏᛁᚼᛉᚹᛖᛚᚼᛞᚼᚢᛞᛖ ¶ ᛋᚼᛉᚦᚼᛏᛒᚼᚱᚢᛏᛉ ArAgeu ¶ hAerAmAlAusz ¶ utiAzwelAdAude ¶ sAzþAtbArutz

Usage notes

 * Whereas the older form, used on the , is inherited from the Proto-Germanic 3rd singular present indicative , the younger form , used on the , comes from the Proto-Germanic 2nd singular present indicative . This is due to a merger of the 3rd singular into the 2nd singular in the present tense of most verbs, fully completed in Old Norse, where both the 2nd and 3rd singular have the form (<  < ).

Descendants

 * (2nd singular present indicative )