saidid

Etymology
A verb with a normally simple etymology but complicated by an irregular preterite.


 * Most forms are from, from , with an analogical vocalism taking after.
 * The deponent preterite forms, such as, are subject to controversy. Thurneysen on the one hand believed it is a blend of an s-preterite and a reduplicated preterite, i.e. a reduplicated s-preterite. McCone and Matasović on the other hand believe that they are suppletive and originally belonged to , which itself is derived from.
 * The perfect forms, in contrast, are not suppletive despite their irregular augments and preserve the old preterite of 🇨🇬, *sāde in any case.

Verb

 * 1) to sit (down)
 * "sga"
 * "sga"

- Seiss i tempul amal do·n-essid Críst; ꝉ do·géntar aidchumtach tempuil less, pridchibid smactu rechto fetarlicce, gébtit  i n-apid,  ɔ·scéra rect núíadnissi.

Inflection
The preterite is reduplicated, while the perfect is from an á-preterite formation obscured in the plural by analogical palatalization.