fluar
Ido edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Esperanto flui, English flow, French fluer, Italian fluire, Spanish fluir.
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
fluar (present tense fluas, past tense fluis, future tense fluos, imperative fluez, conditional fluus)
- (intransitive) to flow, run, glide (of liquids, elec.)
Conjugation edit
Conjugation of fluar
present | past | future | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
infinitive | fluar | fluir | fluor | ||||
tense | fluas | fluis | fluos | ||||
conditional | fluus | ||||||
imperative | fluez | ||||||
adjective active participle | fluanta | fluinta | fluonta | ||||
adverbial active participle | fluante | fluinte | fluonte | ||||
nominal active participle | singular | fluanto | fluinto | fluonto | |||
plural | fluanti | fluinti | fluonti |
Derived terms edit
- adfluar (“to flow or run (to, into, as a river to the sea); to rush (as blood to the head)”)
- adfluo (“afflux”)
- aeroflueto (“draught (of air)”)
- enfluanto (“affluent, tributary (stream)”)
- enfluar (“to flow in”)
- enflueyo (“place of inflow”)
- exterfluar (“to flow, run over”)
- fluanta (“flowing, running”)
- fluanto (“fluent, variable quantity”)
- fluo (“flow, current, stream, streaming”)
- kunfluar (“to be confluent”)
- retrofluar (“to flow back, ebb”)
- superfluantajo (“the overflow, waste”)
- superfluar (“to overflow”)
- superfluo (“overflowing”)
- superfluotubo (“waste pipe”)
Norwegian Nynorsk edit
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
fluar