hver

Etymology
From, from , , cognate with 🇨🇬, , 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬,.

Pronoun

 * 1)  every, each
 * 2)  everyone

Etymology 1
From (from ) and  (from ), which were conflated in late Old Norse. Most of the inflected forms of *hwaz have since become obsolete, and what remains in form is essentially the descendant of *hwarjaz, but with an extra form for the neuter nominative and accusative singular: hvað from Old Norse.

Pronoun

 * 1)  who, what
 * 2)  which (referring to one or several of more than two things or persons; may be qualified by a noun phrase in genitive or a noun phrase with the preposition )
 * 3)  what, which part (referring to part of a mass or group of things or people considered collectively; may be qualified by a noun phrase with the preposition )
 * 4)  whichever (of more than two things or persons; followed by a relative clause; may be qualified by a noun phrase in genitive or a noun phrase with the preposition )
 * 5)  whatever (followed by a relative clause; may be qualified by a noun phrase with the preposition )
 * 6)  who, which, that (used in the forming of relative clauses)
 * 7)  each, every
 * 8) * Article 1, Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Icelandic, English)
 * "is"
 * 1)  whatever (followed by a relative clause; may be qualified by a noun phrase with the preposition )
 * 2)  who, which, that (used in the forming of relative clauses)
 * 3)  each, every
 * 4) * Article 1, Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Icelandic, English)
 * "is"
 * 1) * Article 1, Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Icelandic, English)
 * "is"

- Hver maður er borinn frjáls og jafn öðrum að virðingu og réttindum. Menn eru gæddir vitsmunum og samvizku, og ber þeim að breyta bróðurlega hverjum við annan.

Usage notes
The neuter form hvað is used with senses 1, 3, and 5, hvert with the others. Compare also hvor, hvort.

Derived terms

 * ? (how? what kind of?)
 * ? (why?)
 * (whoever)
 * (every other one)
 * / (one after the other)
 * (like everybody else)

Etymology 2
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) a hot spring

Declension
Previously also declined according to the first declension, with plural hverar:

Etymology
From.

Determiner

 * 1) each
 * 2) every
 * 1) every