tremolar

Catalan

Etymology

From Old Occitan [Term?] (compare Occitan tremolar), from Vulgar Latin tremulāre, present active infinitive of tremulō (compare French trembler, Spanish temblar), which is a derivate of Classical Latin tremere, present active infinitive of tremō, probably through tremulus.

Verb

tremolar (first-person singular present tremolo, past participle tremolat)

  1. to tremble; to shake

Conjugation


Occitan

Etymology

From Old Occitan [Term?], from Vulgar Latin tremulāre, present active infinitive of tremulō, which is a derivate of Classical Latin tremere, present active infinitive of tremō, probably through tremulus.

Verb

tremolar

  1. to tremble; to shake

Conjugation

This verb needs an inflection-table template.


Spanish

Etymology

Probably taken from an Aragonese intermediate (compare Catalan tremolar), from Vulgar Latin tremulāre, present active infinitive of tremulō, which is a derivate of Classical Latin tremere, present active infinitive of tremō, probably through tremulus. Doublet of the inherited Castilian temblar[1].

Verb

tremolar

  1. to sway
  2. to flutter about
  3. (transitive) to wave

Conjugation

      References

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