henchir
Spanish
Etymology
From Old Spanish fenchir, enchir (with the initial -f- possibly through association or similarity with finchar (modern hinchar (“inflate”)[1]), from Latin implere, present active infinitive of impleō (possibly through a Vulgar Latin form *implio, implīre). Compare Portuguese encher, Catalan omplir, French emplir, Italian empire.
Verb
henchir (first-person singular present hincho, first-person singular preterite henchí, past participle henchido)
Conjugation
- Rule: e weakens to i in certain conjugations.
- 1 Mostly obsolete form, still used in legal jargon and set phrases.
Other verbs with this conjugation:
► <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Spanish_verbs_ending_in_-ir_(conjugation_e-i)'>Spanish verbs ending in -ir (conjugation e-i)</a>
Derived terms
- henchidor
- henchidura
- henchimiento
See also
References
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