sekar
See also: Sekar
Brooke's Point Palawano edit
Noun edit
sekar
Ido edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from English intersect, French disséquer, German Sekante, Italian dissecare, Russian косе́канс (kosékans), Spanish intersecar.
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
sekar (present sekas, past sekis, future sekos, conditional sekus, imperative sekez)
- (transitive, surgery) to make a surface cut in
- (transitive) to cut partially through
- (transitive, geometry) to divide into sections
Derived terms edit
- bisekar (“to bisect”)
- dissekar (“to dissect”)
- intersekar (“to intersect”)
- interseko (“intersection”)
- intersekuro (“intersection”)
- kosekanto (“cosecant”)
- nesekebla (“indivisible”)
- sekanta (“secant”)
- sekanto (“secant”)
- sekilo (“surgical instrument”)
- seko (“cut, cutting, section”)
- sekuro (“section, cut”)
- sekvundar (“to slash”)
- sekvunduro (“gash, cut, slash”)
- vivdissekar (“to vivisect”)
- vivdisseko (“vivisection”)
Related terms edit
See also edit
Indonesian edit
Etymology edit
From Javanese ꦱꦼꦏꦂ (sekar, “flower”), from Old Javanese sĕkar (“flower, blooming”). Cognate of Indonesian mekar (“blooming”).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sekar (first-person possessive sekarku, second-person possessive sekarmu, third-person possessive sekarnya)
Derived terms edit
Related terms edit
Further reading edit
- “sekar” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation — Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic Indonesia, 2016.