musti
See also: mušti
Latin
Noun
mustī
- genitive singular of mustum
Serbo-Croatian
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *melsti, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂melǵ-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mûsti/
- Hyphenation: mu‧sti
Verb
mȕsti impf (Cyrillic spelling му̏сти)
- (transitive, intransitive) to milk
Conjugation
Conjugation of musti
| Infinitive: musti | Present verbal adverb: múzūći | Past verbal adverb: — | Verbal noun: múzēnje | ||||
| Number | Singular | Plural | |||||
| Person | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | |
| Verbal forms | ja | ti | on / ona / ono | mi | vi | oni / one / ona | |
| Present | muzem | muzeš | muze | muzemo | muzete | muzu | |
| Future | Future I | must ću1 mušću |
must ćeš1 mušćeš |
must će1 mušće |
must ćemo1 mušćemo |
must ćete1 mušćete |
must će1 mušće |
| Future II | budem muzao2 | budeš muzao2 | bude muzao2 | budemo muzli2 | budete muzli2 | budu muzli2 | |
| Past | Perfect | muzao sam2 | muzao si2 | muzao je2 | muzli smo2 | muzli ste2 | muzli su2 |
| Pluperfect3 | bio sam muzao2 | bio si muzao2 | bio je muzao2 | bili smo muzli2 | bili ste muzli2 | bili su muzli2 | |
| Imperfect | muzijah | muzijaše | muzijaše | muzijasmo | muzijaste | muzijahu | |
| Conditional I | muzao bih2 | muzao bi2 | muzao bi2 | muzli bismo2 | muzli biste2 | muzli bi2 | |
| Conditional II | bio bih muzao2 | bio bi muzao2 | bio bi muzao2 | bili bismo muzli2 | bili biste muzli2 | bili bi muzli2 | |
| Imperative | — | muzi | — | muzimo | muzite | — | |
| Active past participle | muzao m / muzla f / muzlo n | muzli m / muzle f / muzla n | |||||
| Passive past participle | muzen m / muzena f / muzeno n | muzeni m / muzene f / muzena n | |||||
| 1 Croatian spelling: others omit the infinitive suffix completely and bind the clitic. 2 For masculine nouns; a feminine or neuter agent would use the feminine and neuter gender forms of the active past participle and auxiliary verb, respectively. 3 Often replaced by the past perfect in colloquial speech, i.e. the auxiliary verb biti (to be) is routinely dropped. * Note: The aorist and imperfect have nowadays fallen into disuse and as such they are found only in literary texts; routinely replaced by the past perfect in both formal and colloquial speech. | |||||||
Derived terms
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