Catalan edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Spanish acudir, back-formation from recudir, from Latin recutiō.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

acudir (first-person singular present (especially in the sense "to turn up, to be present") acudeixo or (especially in the pronominal sense "to occur") acudo, first-person singular preterite acudí, past participle acudit)

  1. to go to, to attend
  2. (impersonal, takes a reflexive pronoun) to come to mind, to occur (to someone)
    • 2017, “Fent amics”, performed by Renaldo & Clara:
      És l'única manera de salvar-me'n / No se m'acut que contestar-li.
      It's the only way to save me from it / Nothing occurs to me by way of reply.

Conjugation edit

also

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit

Portuguese edit

Etymology edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese acudir, from earlier recudir, from Latin recutere.

Pronunciation edit

 
 
  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /ɐ.kuˈdiɾ/ [ɐ.kuˈðiɾ]
    • (Southern Portugal) IPA(key): /ɐ.kuˈdi.ɾi/ [ɐ.kuˈði.ɾi]

  • Hyphenation: a‧cu‧dir

Verb edit

acudir (first-person singular present acudo, third-person singular present acode, first-person singular preterite acudi, past participle acudido) (transitive, intransitive)

  1. to respond, retort
  2. to help
  3. to run to; to converge (on)

Conjugation edit

Further reading edit

Spanish edit

Etymology edit

A blend between acorrer (to help, aid) and recudir (to return, pay).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /akuˈdiɾ/ [a.kuˈð̞iɾ]
  • Audio (Venezuela):(file)
  • Rhymes: -iɾ
  • Syllabification: a‧cu‧dir

Verb edit

acudir (first-person singular present acudo, first-person singular preterite acudí, past participle acudido)

  1. to go (to), come (to), attend, visit
    • 2010, Germán San Nicasio, La cárcel de Jackson Pollock, Eutelequia, →ISBN, page 89:
      Acudiste al evento con dos horas de retraso y disfrazado de Spiderman.[sic]
      You went to the event two hours late and dressed as Spider-Man.
  2. to turn to, turn, consult, resort to
    Synonym: recurrir
    • 2007, José Blas Fuentes Mañas, “La regla lex loci delicti commissi y normas localizadoras especiales en el reglamento “Roma II””, in Anuario español de derecho internacional privado, volume 7, page 345:
      La distinta calificación de las obligaciones contractuales o extracontractuales por los diferentes ordenamientos jurídicos de los Estados en los que se aplica el Reglamento, nos lleva a considerar las soluciones a un eventual conflicto de calificaciones. La solución más generalizada es acudir a la calificación ex lege fori, pero tratándose de un texto comunitario se impone la necesidad de construir un concepto autónomo que asegure la aplicación uniforme de la norma.
      The distinct qualification of contractual and extracontractual obligations by the different legal systems in which the regulation is applied leads us into considering the solutions for an eventual conflict of qualifications. The most generalized solution is to resort to the qualification from the law of the forum, but dealing with a community text there is a need to construct an autonomous concept which secures the uniform application of the norm.
    • 2007, Luis Garau Juaneda, “La conveniencia de una denuncia por parte de España del convenio de La Haya de 1971 sobre responsabilidad civil derivada de los accidentes de circulación”, in Anuario español de derecho internacional privado, volume 7, page 503:
      […] la autonomía de la voluntad contemplada en el RR II difícilmente sería utilizada en esta materia: el acuerdo a posteriori sobre la ley aplicable es equivalente al acuerdo sobre el fondo, y si hay acuerdo sobre el fondo, ¿para qué acudir a un juez?
      The party autonomy contemplated in the Rome II regulation would be of difficult utilization in this matter: the agreement on the applicable law after the event is tantamount to an agreement on the substance, and when there is agreement on the substance, why resort to the judge?
  3. to come to mind
    acudir a la menteto occur to (someone)
  4. to apply (to), to appeal (to) (e.g. a court, government department, commission)

Conjugation edit

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

Descendants edit

  • Catalan: acudir
  • Italian: accudire

Further reading edit