Indonesian edit

 
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Etymology edit

From Dutch arceer, arceren (to hatch), from Middle French hacher, from Old French hacher, hachier, from Frankish *hakkōn, from Proto-Germanic *hakkōną (to chop; hack).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ˈarsɪr]
  • Hyphenation: ar‧sir

Verb edit

arsir (base/imperative arsir, active mengarsir, ordinary passive diarsir, adversative passive terarsir)

  1. to hatch, shadow with parallel lines.

Conjugation edit

Conjugation of arsir (meng-, transitive)
Root arsir
Active Involuntary Passive Imperative Jussive
Active mengarsir terarsir diarsir arsir arsirlah
Locative
Causative / Applicative1 mengarsirkan terarsirkan diarsirkan arsirkan arsirkanlah
Causative
Locative
Causative / Applicative1
1The -kan row is either causative or applicative, with transitive roots it mostly has applicative meaning.
Notes:
Some of these forms do normally not exist or are rarely used in standard Indonesian. Some forms may also change meaning.

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit