From Old Danish høræ, from Old Norse heyra, from Proto-Germanic *hauzijaną, cognate with Swedish höra, English hear, German hören. The verb goes back to Proto-Indo-European *h₂ḱh₂owsyéti, which is also the source of Ancient Greek ἀκούω (akoúō).
- IPA(key): /ˈhøːʁə/, [ˈhøːɐ], [ˈhøːɒ̽]
høre (past tense hørte, past participle hørt)
- to hear (to perceive with the ears)
- to learn (to be told)
- to belong to (to be a natural part of something, with the preposition til)
- to belong under, come under (to be under the jurisdiction of somebody, with the preposition under)
From Danish høre, from Old Norse heyra, from Proto-Germanic *hauzijaną, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ḱh₂owsyéti.
høre (imperative hør, present tense hører, passive høres, simple past hørte, past participle hørt, present participle hørende)
- to hear
- høre på radio - listen to the radio
- høre til - belong to (see also tilhøre)
- “høre” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
høre (present tense hører, past tense hørde or hørte, past participle hørt, present participle hørande, imperative hør)
- (pre-2012) alternative form of høyra