paniern
Bavarian
editEtymology
editBorrowed from French paner (“to bread”), from French pain, from Latin panis. Cognate with German panieren, Dutch paneren, Swedish panera, Danish panere, Norwegian panere.
Pronunciation
editVerb
editpaniern (past participle paniert)
- (Austria, cooking) to bread
- (Austria, sports) to trounce the opponent
- Gestern håmmas paniert, de Gscherten. ― Yesterday we trounced those peasants.
Conjugation
editConjugation of paniern
infinitive | paniern | ||
---|---|---|---|
present tense | past tense | subjunctive | |
1st person sing. | panier | - | panierad |
2nd person sing. | panierst | - | panieradst |
3rd person sing. | paniert | - | panierad |
1st person plur. | paniern | - | panieradn |
2nd person plur. | panierts | - | panierats |
3rd person plur. | paniern | - | panieradn |
imperative sing. | panier | ||
imperative plur. | panierts | ||
past participle | paniert |