See also: Vidar and Viðar

Ido edit

Etymology edit

From Esperanto vidi, from French voir, Italian vedere, Spanish ver, from Latin vidēre, present active infinitive of videō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *weyd-.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /vi.ˈdar/, /vi.ˈdaɾ/

Verb edit

vidar (present tense vidas, past tense vidis, future tense vidos, imperative videz, conditional vidus)

  1. (transitive) to see
    Ka vu povas vidar lu?
    Can you see him/her?

Conjugation edit

Derived terms edit

  • vido (seeing, vision, view)
  • vidala (visual)
  • vidajo (what is seen, sight, view)
  • videyo (viewpoint (locality))
  • vidado (seeing, vision, view)
  • vidata (in view)
  • videbla (visible, apparent, on view)
  • vidindajo (thing worth seeing, curiosity)

Related terms edit

  • spektar (to look at, see)
  • regardar (to regard, look at attentively)

Portuguese edit

Pronunciation edit

 
 

  • Hyphenation: vi‧dar

Etymology 1 edit

From vide +‎ -ar.

Verb edit

vidar (first-person singular present vido, first-person singular preterite videi, past participle vidado)

  1. (transitive) to plant vines
Conjugation edit

Etymology 2 edit

Uncertain.

Noun edit

vidar m (plural vidares)

  1. kind of saw with which the thick teeth on the combs were opened