Friulian edit

Etymology edit

From or related to stiç; compare Venetian stiçar, stisar. Perhaps linked to a Vulgar Latin *attitiō, attitiāre, from Latin titiō, and influenced by stiç, or from a variant root *extitiāre. Cf. also Italian attizzare.

Verb edit

stiçâ

  1. to poke (a fire)
  2. to stoke
  3. to stir up, incite

Conjugation edit

This was conjugated like a regular verb, but with a change from -ç- to -c- before front vowels (i and e).

Related terms edit