peti

See also: Peti, peți, pēti, and pētī

Esperanto

Etymology

From Polish pytać (to ask), Latin petō.

Verb

peti (present petas, past petis, future petos, conditional petus, volitive petu)

  1. To ask for, request, beg, bid.
    • 1910, L. L. Zamenhof, "Proverbaro Esperanta":
      Kiu ne petas, tiu ne ricevas.
      One who doesn't ask doesn't receive.

Inflection

Derived terms


Finnish

Etymology

From Swedish bädd.

Noun

peti

  1. (colloquial) bed

Declension

Inflection of peti (Kotus type 5/risti, t-d gradation)
nominative peti pedit
genitive pedin petien
partitive petiä petejä
illative petiin peteihin
singular plural
nominative peti pedit
accusative nom. peti pedit
gen. pedin
genitive pedin petien
partitive petiä petejä
inessive pedissä pedeissä
elative pedistä pedeistä
illative petiin peteihin
adessive pedillä pedeillä
ablative pediltä pedeiltä
allative pedille pedeille
essive petinä peteinä
translative pediksi pedeiksi
instructive pedein
abessive pedittä pedeittä
comitative peteineen

Synonyms

Anagrams


Indonesian

Etymology

From Sanskrit.

Noun

peti

  1. box

Italian

Noun

peti m

  1. plural of peto

Anagrams


Latin

Verb

petī

  1. present passive infinitive of petō

Malay

Etymology

From Tamil பெட்டி (peṭṭi, chest, trunk, box, case) or Hindi पेटी (peṭī, box, chest).

Noun

pĕti (plural peti-peti)

  1. box, chest, case

Middle English

Adjective

peti

  1. Alternative form of pety

Serbo-Croatian

Adjective

peti (Cyrillic spelling пети)

  1. (ordinal) fifth

Slovene

Slovene numbers
< 4 5 6 >

Etymology 1

From Proto-Slavic *pętъ.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɛ̀ːti/
  • Tonal orthography: péti

Adjective

pêti (not comparable)

  1. fifth
Declension

Etymology 2

From Proto-Slavic *pěti, cognated with Serbo-Croatian pȅvati

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpèːti/
  • Tonal orthography: pẹ́ti

Verb

péti impf (first-person singular present pôjem, past active participle pél)

  1. to sing
    ptica poje, ptice pojejo
    the bird sings, the birds sing
Conjugation

This verb needs an inflection-table template.

Derived terms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.