Originally from*vemte (*vem suffixed withte), from the original form inProto-Albanian*wadmi, from athematicProto-Indo-European*weh₂dʰ- (perhaps*weh₂dʰ-mi).
Also cognate toEnglishwade(“to walk through water”),Old Armenianգամ(gam,“to come”),Latinvādō(“to go, walk”).[1]
vete (aoristvajta,participlevajtur)
Fromvet(“to ask”).
vete
Fromvetë.
vete
FromMiddle Dutchvete, fromOld Dutch*faitha, fromProto-West Germanic*faihiþu.
vete f (pluralvetesorveten,diminutivevetetje n)
vete
vete m (definite singularveten,indefinite pluralvetar,definite pluralvetane)
vete (present tenseveit,past tensevisste,past participlevisst,passive infinitivevetast,present participlevetande,imperativevet)
vete
vete

FromOld Norsehveiti, fromProto-Germanic*hwaitijaz, from*hwītaz(“white”).
vete n
| nominative | genitive | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | indefinite | vete | vetes |
| definite | vetet | vetets | |
| plural | indefinite | — | — |
| definite | — | — |
vete