See also: Tesar, tesař, tesár, and тесар

CatalanEdit

EtymologyEdit

From tes (tight), or possibly from a Vulgar Latin *tensāre, from Latin tensus, perfect passive participle of tendō.

PronunciationEdit

VerbEdit

tesar (first-person singular present teso, past participle tesat)

  1. (transitive) to tighten, tauten
    • 2011, Daniel Closa i Autet, 100 invents que han canviat el món:
      Si posem la fletxa ben col·locada i tesem l'arc, el que fem és acumular una bona quantitat d'energia que, en deixar-la anar, s'alliberarà de cop i empenyerà la fletxa a gran velocitat.
      If we position the arrow well and tauten the bow, what we do is accumulate a good quantity of energy which, in letting go, is released at once and thrusts the arrow forward at high velocity.

ConjugationEdit

Further readingEdit

Serbo-CroatianEdit

NounEdit

tȅsār m (Cyrillic spelling те̏са̄р)

  1. carpenter

DeclensionEdit

SpanishEdit

EtymologyEdit

From a Vulgar Latin *tēnsāre, from Latin tēnsus, perfect passive participle of tendō.

PronunciationEdit

  • IPA(key): /teˈsaɾ/ [t̪eˈsaɾ]
  • Rhymes: -aɾ
  • Syllabification: te‧sar

VerbEdit

tesar (first-person singular present teso, first-person singular preterite tesé, past participle tesado)

  1. (nautical) to sweat
    Synonym: atesar

ConjugationEdit

Related termsEdit

Further readingEdit