reeniri
Esperanto edit
Pronunciation edit
Etymology 1 edit
From re- + eniri (“to go inside”).
Verb edit
reeniri (present reeniras, past reeniris, future reeniros, conditional reenirus, volitive reeniru)
- to reenter, go back in
- 1907, Henri Vallienne, Kastelo de Prelongo:
- Reenirinte en sian ĉambron, la dukino sin sentis lacega.
- Reentering into her room, the duchess felt exhausted.
- 1999, Anna Löwenstein, La ŝtona urbo:
- Intertempe ni povis fari tre malmulte krom ŝvebi ĉe la rando de la urbo atendante ĝis eblos reeniri ĝin.
- In the mean time we could do very little except for floating around at the edge of the city until we're able to go back inside of it.
Conjugation edit
Conjugation of reeniri
|
Etymology 2 edit
From reen (“back”) + iri (“to go”).
Verb edit
reeniri (present reeniras, past reeniris, future reeniros, conditional reenirus, volitive reeniru)
- (rare) to go back
- 1907, Henri Vallienne, Kastelo de Prelongo:
- Ni reeniru, ŝi diris; mi timas.
- Let's go back, she said; I'm scared.
Usage notes edit
Usually written as two separate words, an adverb (reen) and a verb (iri), rather than as one compound; most often in reverse order: “iri reen”.