Italian

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Verb

edit

ausàre (first-person singular present aùso, first-person singular past historic ausài, past participle ausàto, auxiliary avére)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) Alternative form of adusare
Conjugation
edit
Derived terms
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Per Treccani, Encyclopedia Dantesca,[1] occurs in only two places:

  • As a feminine singular unsuffixed past participle ausa:
    Lo rege per cui questo regno pausa / in tanto amore e in tanto diletto, / che nulla volontà è di più ausa.
    (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    (Dante, Paradiso, XXXII 63)
  • As a first-person singular present indicative auso:
    Io non auso rizzar.
    (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    (Chiaro Com' forte vita 9, Rustico)

Verb

edit

ausàre (first-person singular present àuso, first-person singular past historic ausài, past participle ausàto, unknown auxiliary)

  1. (intransitive, obsolete) Alternative form of osare
Conjugation
edit

References

edit

Anagrams

edit

Neapolitan

edit

Verb

edit

ausare

  1. Alternative form of usare (to use) (affixed with a-)

References

edit
  • Rocco, Emmanuele (1882) “ausare”, in Vocabolario del dialetto napolitano