See also: sèlar and șelar

Malay edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *saŋelaʀ, compare Tetum sona.

Verb edit

selar

  1. to brand

Middle English edit

Noun edit

selar

  1. a canopy
    • 1485, Sir Thomas Malory, “vj”, in Le Morte Darthur, book XVII:
      Anone as he beganne to werke / ther cam out droppes of blood / and thenne wold he haue lefte / but she wold not suffre hym // and soo he tooke aweye as moche wood as myȝte make a spyndyl / and soo she made hym to take as moche of the grene tree and of the whyte tree / And whan these thre spyndels were shapen / she made hem to be fastned vpon the selar of the bedde
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)

Norwegian Nynorsk edit

Noun edit

selar m

  1. indefinite plural of sel
  2. indefinite plural of sele

Verb edit

selar

  1. present of sela

Old Norse edit

Noun edit

selar

  1. nominative plural of seli
  2. nominative plural of selr

Portuguese edit

Pronunciation edit

 
 

Etymology 1 edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese selar, from Latin sigillāre. Compare Spanish sellar, Catalan segellar, French sceller, Italian suggellare. Cf. also the borrowed doublet sigilar.

Verb edit

selar (first-person singular present selo, first-person singular preterite selei, past participle selado)

  1. to seal; to stamp
Conjugation edit
Related terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

From sela +‎ -ar.

Verb edit

selar (first-person singular present selo, first-person singular preterite selei, past participle selado)

  1. to saddle
Conjugation edit