banhar

Occitan

Etymology

From Old Occitan, from Vulgar Latin *baneare, from Late Latin balneāre, from Latin balneum. Compare Catalan banyar, French baigner, Spanish bañar, Italian bagnare.

Verb

banhar

  1. to bathe
  2. (by extension) to wet; to moisten

Conjugation


Portuguese

Etymology

From Old Portuguese bannar, from Vulgar Latin *baneāre, from Late Latin balneāre, from Latin balneum. Compare Spanish and Galician bañar, French baigner, Italian bagnare.

Pronunciation

Verb

banhar (first-person singular present indicative banho, past participle banhado)

  1. (transitive) To bathe; to give a bath; to clean by using water.
    Ela banhava-se no lago - She bathed in the lake
  1. (transitive, of an ocean or another water body) To bound the shore of a country, continent or other geographic region
    Os Estados Unidos são banhados pelo Oceano Atlântico ao leste e pelo Oceano Pacífic ao oeste - The United States are bounded by the Atlantic Ocean on the east and the Pacific Ocean on the west

Conjugation

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