nosse

Danish

Etymology

Perhaps from or related to Old Norse nosi (stallion's genitals).

Noun

nosse c (singular definite nossen, plural indefinite nosser)

  1. (slang, chiefly plural) testicle

Inflection

Declension of nosse
common
gender
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative nosse nossen nosser nosserne
genitive nosses nossens nossers nossernes

Synonyms

Verb

nosse (imperative nos, infinitive at nosse, present tense nosser, past tense nossede, perfect tense nosset)

  1. mess around, fuck up

Conjugation

Conjugation of nosse
active passive
present nosser nosses
past nossede nossedes
infinitive nosse nosses
imperative nos
participle
present -
past nosset
(auxiliary verb have)
gerund

References

Latin

Pronunciation

Verb

nōsse

  1. alternative form of nōvisse, perfect active infinitive of nōscō
    • c. 84 BCE – 54 BCE, Catullus, Carmina 72.1:
      Dicebas quondam solum te nosse Catullum, []
      You once used to say that you only ever slept with Catullus, []

Middle English

Noun

nosse

  1. alternative form of nose

Norman

Etymology

Borrowed from English nurse.

Noun

nosse f (plural nosses)

  1. (Jersey) nurse